Meeting Tomorrow Today
Transcription
Meeting Tomorrow Today
Meeting Tomorrow Today ASIAHEDGE FORUM AsiaHedge Forum 2011: Report Meeting Tomorrow Today: After the tsunami Taking place in the shadow of the devastating Japan earthquake and resulting markets meltdown, the AsiaHedge Forum served as a platform for the international hedge fund community, top allocators and policy makers to debate strategies not just for rebuilding portfolios in the wake of this major event, but also strategically to harness the growth potential of the geo-political and economic powerhouse that Asia is turning out to be The AsiaHedge Forum 2011 came at a time when the eyes of the world were on Japan, as it reeled from one of the biggest earthquakes in recorded history, the subsequent tsunami and a nuclear power station perilously close to meltdown. Not surprisingly then, Japan was a major topic of conversation both on stage and off for the duration of the two-day event. But beyond Japan, panellists and keynote speakers also covered all the hot-button topics for the Asian hedge fund industry, from the macro-economic backdrop to micro strategies, and from attracting the largest global allocators to coping with new regulatory requirements in key markets. Sponsored by © AsiaHedge 08-17 Forum.indd 9 There were 11 diverse panel sessions, bringing together both managers and investors to discuss where the money is coming from and how it is being deployed, as well as three top-notch keynote addresses from Don Hanna of Fortress Investment Group, John Ho of Janchor Partners, and John Tsang, the Financial Secretary of Hong Kong. Associates April 2011 9 19/04/2011 12:41 ASIAHEDGE FORUM Meeting Tomorrow Today The macro-economic climate: Which way are the macro-economic winds blowing globally and what tidings do they bring for Asia? Panellists Frank Brochin, Stonewater Capital Monica Hsiao, CQS Brenda Tse, Permal Group Rachel Ziemba, Roubini Global Economics Moderator Kirby Daley, Newedge Group The first discussion of the Forum zoomed straight in on Japan. Rachel Ziemba of Roubini Global Economics spoke for the whole panel when she said that everyone was grappling with what macro effects of the disaster would be. “In GDP terms the effect might be lower than that of the Kobe earthquake, but what we don’t know is the effect on nuclear power and power sources for Japan in future,” she said. Permal Group’s Brenda Tse noted that the yen appreciated 20% after the Kobe earthquake. “The Bank of Japan will repatriate a lot of money, but long-term I think the yen will The macro panel from left: Frank Brochin, Monica Hsiao, Brenda Tse, Rachel Ziemba, Kirby Daley depreciate. It might affect some of the Japanese long/short equity managers and we are researching several areas in Japan so we can capitalise on opportunities there.” Broadening the discussion to the global macro-economic situation in 2011, Stonewater Capital’s Frank Brochin observed a shift in sentiment this year, with money flowing back to the US and Europe and being taken away from emerging markets. “We think this is fundamentally the wrong bet, that growth has come back in developed markets, while the fundamental situation in Europe and the US is still very fragile,” he said. On the credit side, the outlook is relatively positive even in sectors like Chinese property which is easy to dismiss due to tightening regulations, said Monica Hsiao of CQS. “I am generally positive about relative value in Asia and we expect money to flow back into emerging markets later in the year.” In the current environment, investors need to stop indiscriminately investing in emerging-market countries and recognise the differences between countries, said Brochin. “For example, in Latin America urbanisation is not a big driver for growth in the way it is in China.” KEYNOTE SPEECH: Don Hanna, Fortress Investment Group Don Hanna, managing director of global liquid markets research at Fortress Investment Group, gave his erudite views on the most pressing macro-economic issues of the day – inflation, oil prices, and, of course, the disaster in Japan Hanna started out by saying that it is these kinds of events that make macro-economics complicated and exciting. Last November, Fortress saw that there were inflation-related opportunities in rates, currencies and equities. At that point, the most obvious countries that were sitting on their hands relative to the pace of inflation were Indonesia and India. In terms of equity markets, the firm made a distinction between developed countries where some inflation could be beneficial, for example, the US or Russia, and other countries where the primary influence would be monetary-policy tightening. Hanna noted that he also had exchange rate views that went across the spectrum from benign to virulent. There was China, where his view was that there is likely to be a modest amount of currency appreciation. Then there were places like Malaysia, where the central bank had been more aggressive earlier in the year. The difficult call, he noted, was Korea, where a lot of people had been betting on currency appreciation over the course of 2010 – something that did not come through. The other major market in which Fortress was playing was Brazil because it is a proxy for 10 April 2011 08-17 Forum.indd 10 emerging markets for many Americans. That was going to hurt Brazilian equities, he said. That sentiment until around Chinese New Year, Hanna noted, and part of what shifted in that period was that central banks surprised the market with the degree to which they were willing to adjust their policies. The other big complication to this inflation trade has been the Middle East. “The big surprise has been this disruption in supply. How does this impact on the inflation trade? The fundamental issue is that Saudi Arabia can only expand its output to full capacity,” he remarked. “If another element of the market goes out, then we’ll have the price dynamics we saw in 2008 when the market can’t adjust by supply and has to adjust by price.” Higher oil prices also add greatly to the diversity among emerging market nations. Hanna noted that the clear winners are Malaysia, the only net exporter, and Indonesia because of natural gas, while the losers are largely in north Asia. The focus of the growth story last year was on north Asia’s ability to benefit from China growth, but when commodity prices are rising, ASEAN’s relative performance looks a lot better. The last complication is what had just happened in Japan, explained Hanna. “It is a case of understanding the interplay between the event at the moment, understanding its magnitude and separating that out from what’s going to happen over time. That is crucial to making sensible investment decisions.” The Bank of Japan has already responded with quantitative easing. As an economist, Hanna said he thought it should just do a lot more of this. “It’s also a question of what Japan means for everybody else. As far as GDP is concerned, countries where the effect actually matters are all clustered here in Asia and for a 1% impact in Japan, there’s maybe 0.1% impact on other countries’ growth.” © AsiaHedge 19/04/2011 12:41 Meeting Tomorrow Today ASIAHEDGE FORUM Capital-raising environment for Asian funds and changing investor attitudes “ I don’t understand the western thinking about being no more than 10% of a fund’s AUM. If I’m only 1% [of the fund], the manager may not even make time to see me ” L to r: Patrick de Gentile-Williams, Nikos Latsos, Philippe Paquet, Ed Rogers, Franz Schmid, Gilbert Grosjean Panellists Patric de Gentile-Williams, FRM Capital Advisors Nikos Latsos, Alpheus Advisors Philippe Paquet, NewAlpha Ed Rogers, Rogers Investment Advisors Franz Schmid, Man Investments Moderator Gilbert Grosjean, Citco Group What would it take for global investors to commit to Asia as a mainstream option and what are investors looking for in Asian managers? These were two of the key questions posed to the international panel of hedge fund allocators. There were divergent views on whether size of assets under management was a priority consideration. “We are hedge fund seeders, so the ones that come to us are smaller managers,” said Philippe Paquet of NewAlpha. “We use the same criteria as in the US and Europe, though we have a relative bias favouring locally based managers investing in their native market where they have long experience.” In practical terms, the much-vaunted institutionalisation of the Asian hedge funds industry means that managers can define and clearly articulate what they do, said FRM Capital Advisors’ Patric de Gentile-Williams. “We need to understand how managers manage money, otherwise they won’t get traction.” Partnership with managers is a key element, said Ed Rogers of Rogers Investors Advisors. More than three-quarters of Asian managers fail to meet staffing and AUM criteria, and those that succeed often have prob- lems with their business management. “We can add value in identifying problems with the business side and fixing them,” he added. Memories of Asian managers’ inability to protect on the downside in 2008 still linger in institutional investors’ minds, said Franz Schmid of Man Investments. “What we need is more managers that are either non-directional or directional, but with a broad mandate – this will be quite attractive for many investors.” Nikos Latsos of Alpheus Advisors argued against the conventional wisdom about ensuring that any investment in a hedge fund should be only a minor part of the fund’s AUM, which limits the range of options in Asia. “I don’t understand the western thinking about being no more than 10% of a fund’s AUM. If I’m only 1% [of the fund], the manager may not even make time to see me.” Going global: Building a world-class Asian hedge fund brand Panellists Kam Bahra, PMA Investment Advisors Jimmy Chan, Value Partners Group Bill Lu, Ortus Capital Management Chris Nash, Senrigan Capital Group Moderator Aradhna Dayal, AsiaHedge From veterans of the Asian hedge fund industry to new arrivals on the scene, the panellists represented the elite of the Asian hedge funds industry. All four are Hong Kong-based, and find the city a perfect location to run a business with global reach. Said Bill Lu of Ortus Capital Management: “In our case, in terms of information flow we don’t get any less, and in a world where information flow from China and Asia is becoming increasingly important I think it’s an advantage to be here.” For Value Partners, Hong Kong is not just home to the firm but the home of many of its investors, as it has retail distribution, said Jimmy Chan. “It has been very difficult to raise money from European and US investors in recent years, and the wealth of this region is much stronger than before.” “ L to r: Kam Bahra, Jimmy Chan, Dr Bill Lu, Chris Nash and moderator Aradhna Dyal Managers focused on Asian strategies find it makes sense to be in Hong Kong, but whether they are considered a global brand is not always up to them, said PMA’s Kam Bahra. “You need to be good at what you do, disciplined and cognisant of your capacity. What is classified as a global brand is actually up to the investors. If you have a suitable infrastructure and longevity, you become investors’ first call You’ve got to have a vision of what you want to build, a plan to do it and a whole lot of capital at the start © AsiaHedge 08-17 Forum.indd 11 ” for intelligence, and that all goes towards building a global brand.” Although the newest player on the panel, Senrigan’s event-driven strategy was hugely popular with investors from the start. The advice of Chris Nash of Senrigan for would-be Asian-based managers who want to build a global brand is: start by thinking big. “You’ve got to have a vision of what you want to build, a plan to do it and a whole lot of capital at the start. It’s very hard to retrofit these things, and if you make cheap decisions you will live with them for a long time,” he said. April 2011 11 19/04/2011 12:41 ASIAHEDGE FORUM Meeting Tomorrow Today KEYNOTE SPEECH: John Tsang, the Financial Secretary of Hong Kong In his keynote address, John Tsang, the Financial Secretary of Hong Kong, explained why Hong Kong makes such an attractive base for hedge fund managers Introduction by V-Nee Yeh, Argyle Street Management and member of the Executive Council of the Government of HKSAR V-Nee Yeh set the scene for John Tsang’s speech by saying that Hong Kong market has the attributes of the three Cs: consistency, credibility and competitiveness. “It is consistent because despite going through six market bursts since 1999, its regulatory structure has remained unswerving and coherent. It is credible because it has been predictable and transparent, instead of reacting whimsically to the vagaries of market behaviour. It is competitive, as validated by your [Tsang’s] presence and your interest in this market. So it is with pleasure that I introduce John Tsang, the Financial Secretary, so that he can share further insights with us.” “ Since the turn of the century, the global hedge fund industry has seen some remarkable developments. Back in the year 2000, total industry assets stood at US$277 billion. In the following seven years, this figure increased seven-fold to almost US$2 trillion. Then came the global financial crisis when things practically come to a halt. Following the turbulence of the past 18 months, the industry is now back on track. The question today is this, what next? Here in Asia, there were 95 hedge fund launches last year, up from 78 in 2009. Of the 95 new launches last year, 57 were in Hong Kong with $2.4 billion in assets, making a total of some 550 operating hedge funds based right here in Hong Kong. This maintains Hong Kong’s lead as the preferred destination for hedge funds in Asia. Nevertheless, the outlook of the hedge fund industry globally is rather mixed. On the one hand, sovereign debt risks and changes in economic policy make for uncomfortable reading. Natural disasters, including those in New Zealand and Japan, take a heavy toll on the economies, creating uncertainties and volatilities. Impending reforms and demands for greater transparency will also impact on the industry. On the flip side of the coin, positive trends of fiscal balance, growth, savings, rising living standards and favourable demographics have all moved east to favour Asia. This clearly brings fresh opportunities to our region, and also to this city. The increase in the high net-worth individual population is substantial in the Asia-Pacific region. According to the World Wealth Report 2010 published by Merrill Lynch and Capgemini, the Asia-Pacific HNWI population rose 25% overall to 3 million, catching up with Europe for the first time. This is in tandem with strong economic growth in Asia, in particular, in mainland China which again saw double-digit growth last year of 10.3%. China is now a major capital exporter 12 April 2011 08-17 Forum.indd 12 with the largest foreign exchange reserves in the world, some US$2.5 trillion as of June 2010. The mainland market has been opening up gradually through the Qualified Foreign Institutional Investors Scheme. This presents huge opportunities for the funds industry. A total QFII quota of US$19.7 billion has been granted by the State Administration of Foreign Exchange to foreign institutional investors as of end 2010. With a robust financial infrastructure and a large pool of professionals familiar with China know-how, Hong Kong continues to be an attractive platform for international players to invest in the mainland. Under the Qualified Domestic Institutional Investor Scheme, approved commercial banks, securities firms, fund management companies and insurance companies are allowed to invest in Hong Kong stocks and other specified securities. A total QDII quota of over US$68 billion has been granted by SAFE as of the end of last year. What makes Hong Kong an ideal platform for hedge funds and financial institutions to explore the business potential in Asia? We have the rule of law, supported by an independent judiciary; we maintain a low and simple tax regime; the Hong Kong dollar is fully convertible and we have no foreign exchange control. Perhaps most important, besides location, we have a robust and effective regulatory regime as well as a deep and broad pool of financial talent. All this makes Hong Kong an ideal place to harness the opportunities presented by the economic growth in Asia, and particularly in Mainland China. Allow me to outline five ways the Government is strengthening the competitiveness of Hong Kong’s asset management industry. We are enhancing investor protection and market quality. This includes improving the legal framework of public offerings for structured products. We are preparing to establish an investor education council; and we are gearing up to launch an independent Insurance Authority, among other things. We are promoting a business-friendly environment. Here we are helping to develop renminbi business in Hong Kong. We are rewriting the Companies Ordinance and modernising the trust law. This will help to promote healthy competition. A third area is to establish a network of agreements for the avoidance of double taxation or with major economies. In the 10 months since the Inland Revenue (Amendment) Ordinance 2010, came into effect, we have reached agreement on double taxation with 13 major trade partners. Others are in the pipeline. Then there are fiscal incentives. Offshore funds are exempted from tax for profits derived from specified transactions in Hong Kong. The abolition of estate duty since 2006 encourages local and overseas investors to hold assets in Hong Kong. Last year, I extended the stamp duty concession for trading exchange-traded funds to cover ETFs. Our fifth initiative is to step up overseas promotions. The Government has continued to lead financial services delegations to the mainland and other markets to promote Hong Kong’s financial services. This is a great way to highlight the city’s advantages as a major asset management centre in Asia. The first leg of a global campaign to promote Hong Kong as China’s global financial centre was held in London in November last year. This was followed by the Asian Financial Forum in Hong Kong in January and we also held a conference in New York earlier this month. Our ‘overseas fixtures’ will continue to be played out in the months ahead. Hong Kong will continue to be a reliable and dynamic platform for both local and overseas fund managers. With the global financial crisis behind us in Asia, I am sure that the hedge fund industry will continue to grow and prosper in this part of the world. ” © AsiaHedge 19/04/2011 12:41 Meeting Tomorrow Today ASIAHEDGE FORUM International hedge funds moving into Asia Panellists Young Chin, Pyramis Global Investors Steve Kim, Marathon Tim Rainsford, Man Investments Scott Reinhart, Pine River Capital Moderator Martin Visairas, Citi Prime Finance There has long been a steady stream of international managers beating a path to Asia. Panellists were asked about what they find when they get here and what impact their presence has on the local industry. “If you say you’re Asian specialists, it’s hard to be taken seriously if you’re not in the region,” said Pine River’s Scott Reinhart. “From our standpoint, it’s been a huge boost to our ability to be able to speak with brokers, analysts and management in the region.” For Man Investments, the initial decision to be in Asia was marketing-led, but in time the Asian presence evolved from servicing structured products and managed futures fund clients to being a base for managers as well. “It was easy for them to set up because we already had a large infrastructure in Asia and as our strategies will develop we’ll continue to do the same,” said Man’s Tim Rainsford. Pyramis’ Young Chin found that having people on the ground really boosted the firm’s understanding of Asia. “When you fly in you have a tendency to look at stocks in a certain way, and you can’t understand the dynamics and granularity as well.” For Marathon, the decision to set up shop in Asia was from an investment-decision standpoint – to get close to the markets – but being able to raise capital in the region came as L to r: Young Chin, Steve Kim, Tim Rainsford, Scott Reinhart, moderator Martin Visairas a pleasant surprise. “Asia has become a much more meaningful source of capital; there are deep sources such as sovereign wealth funds and family offices that have become acclimatised to investing in the hedge funds space,” said Marathon’s Steve Kim. Still the firm’s main focus is the US, and Asia will only be a satellite, he added. Hidden gems in Asia Panellists Greg Davidson, DCP Oracle Robert Lewis, Novatera Capital Lester Poon, Cheetah Investment Management Peter Tasker, Arcus Investment Moderator Aradhna Dayal, AsiaHedge For all the talk of the institutionalisation of the hedge fund industry, it is still one in which niche players can thrive. All four panellists have found their own niche and came together to discuss the environment for their strategies. One of the issues was scalability. Cheetah Investment Management’s Lester Poon said investors often mistakenly thought that the limitations of the domestic China market might restrict his fund. “But in the last few years mon- ey allocated to the domestic commodities sector has gone up four or five times,” he said, while both Japan specialist Arcus Investment’s Peter Tasker and L to r: Lester Poon, Robert Lewis, Greg Davidson, Peter Tasker, Greg Davidson of com- moderator Aradhna Dayal modity arbitrage fund DCP Oracle both agreed that the sweet spot was Despite being a niche manager, Tasker has attracted a heterogenous investor profile, includbetween $300 million and $500 million. However, for small-cap investor Novatera Cap- ing Japanese, other Asian and European individital, the strategy is not scalable, said founder ual investors, family offices, and fund of funds. Robert Lewis. “I can do up to 300 company visits Having a certain comfort level with risk dea year and put 30 companies in the portfolio. I termines the investor profile, said Davidson. could go for bigger companies but one of the “People in Asia are more comfortable with the nice things about small- and mid-caps is that risk of China. For most North Americans Chinot that many people are looking at them.” na is an enigma,” he commented. The emergence of Asian investors L to r: Denise Hu, David Walter, Jerry Wang, John Knox, Harold Yoon, moderator Aradhna Dayal Panellists Denise Hu, Archer Asia John Knox, LGT Capital Partners David Walter, PAAMCO Jerry Wang, Vision Investment Management Harold Yoon, SAIL Advisors Moderator Aradhna Dayal © AsiaHedge 08-17 Forum.indd 13 Hedge fund allocators kicked off the panel with a look back at the events of 2008 and how industry participants have reinvented themselves since. “The biggest change has been a real shake-out in managers – those with best pedigree and track record have been able to maintain business,” said Harold Yoon of SAIL Advisors. “Managers with the best pedigrees are the ones able to raise capital and [now] if you’re going to get access to these well-known managers, you have to get in early.” Risk management and liquidity are much higher on the agenda than they were before, said LGT Capital Partners’ John Knox. “Our expectations of transparency have changed dramatically. We expect to know what people are doing; we don’t like to rely just on trust.” Not all allocators are looking for size – PAAMCO’s David Walter is focused on emerg- ing managers to invest in from the start, but only those who are their own bosses. “We have a huge aversion to seeding – those managers are presented with enormous conflicts of interest, especially during times of stress,” he said. Similarly, Archer Asia’s Denise Hu is realistic about what the region can offer in terms of the size. “Only a few funds can be compared with big hedge funds outside the region,” she said. On the topic of consolidation, it was not necessarily an answer to the industry’s problems, panellists said. Knox noted the Darwinian nature of the industry that will make it extremely difficult for those trailing along the bottom to survive, but consolidation will not help them, said Vision Investment Management’s Jerry Wang. “It’s not that easy for two hedge funds to merge or to be part of a bigger global fund. I don’t see a lot of consolidation on the horizon,” he said. April 2011 13 19/04/2011 12:41 ASIAHEDGE FORUM Meeting Tomorrow Today Strategy Focus – Equities L to r: Jason Schwartz, Jeff Levy, Amit Rajpal, Jon Thorn, moderator Rodney Diola Panellists Jeff Levy, Turiya Capital Amit Rajpal, Marshall Wace Jason Schwartz, Symphony Financial Partners Jon Thorn, India Capital Management Moderator Rodney Diola, AsiaHedge The first of the strategy focus panels turned the spotlight on equities, with a stellar line-up of some of the region’s foremost equity managers. Strategy Focus – Non-Equities Panellists Prasoon Dayal, Nomura International Brian Heywood, Taiyo Pacific Partners Ivan Lee, Serica Partners Eddie Tam, Central Asset Investments Moderator Neil Wilson, HedgeFund Intelligence Given the diversity of the panellists, not surprisingly the discussion in the non-equities session was wide-ranging, from the impact of the Japan situation on credit markets, to China’s renminbi policy and what investors are looking for in non-equities funds. As the panellist with the strongest focus on Japan was very much on their mind, with Tokyo-based Symphony Financial Partners having rolled out its emergency plan a few days earlier by moving key staff to separate locations within and beyond Japan. However, the reasons for investing in Japan are as good as ever, said Symphony’s Jason Schwartz. “The business aspect of the tragedy is that, given the great degree of dislocation we’ve seen, there are many opportunities. If you are looking at the right types of companies and getting in at the right levels, Japan is the best place to be invested right now. There will be an overhang on the market until the long-term impact on Japan can be determined, but many companies with great franchises are virtually untouched by what’s going on in Japan.” Both Amit Rajpal of Marshall Wace and Jeff Japan, Taiyo Partners’ Brian Heywood remained sanguine. “There seems to be a consensus among those who have deep dealings with Japan, that the long-term economic impact on Japan is not going to be as great as CNN would have you believe,” he said. As a manager of a pan-Asian credit-focused fund, Serica Partners’ Ivan Lee saw the impact on credit as being limited, at least as far as bigger companies were concerned. “The impact on the rest of Asia is nothing dramatic,” he added. Interest in non-equity strategies is growing, said Nomura International’s Prasoon Dayal. In recent years investors were so focused on liquidity their attention could not be pulled elsewhere. “Things have improved. I’ve seen a lot of people looking seriously at convertibles, more structured equity and structured debt instruments where they weren’t interested before.” Looking at China, China’s grand experiment with offshore renminbi in Hong Kong and the Levy of Turiya Capital had been looking at Japanese financials, both before and after the disaster. “The fundamentals have generally been very favourable,” said Levy. “We focus on banks and other financials, and the biggest opportunity is with banks,” added Rajpal. “In Japan, the chance that the integrity of the banking system will be compromised is very low.” On the other side of Asia, India Capital Management’s John Thorn has been grappling with a very challenging market but one that has started to stir investor interest again. “India was the worst-performing market in Asia before the Japan tragedy, and it’s still a very difficult market. However, I’ve just returned from a marketing trip to the US, and for the first time in five years had a very positive response.” L to r: Eddie Tam, Brian Heywood, Ivan Lee, Prasoon Dayal, moderator Neil Wilson development of an offshore bond market were trends worth watching closely, said multi-strategy fund manager Eddie Tam of CAI. “The question of whether the RMB can challenge the US dollar and the euro is way off into the future; the amount of RMB in the system would need to increase by two orders of magnitude first. But people have been coming up with RMB bond issues to satisfy demand for RMB assets.” China: What is the true potential of this awakening dragon? Panellists Donna Kwok, HSBC Chad Liu, Prudence Investment Management George Phillips, Northwest Investment Management Jenny Tian, Springs Capital Richard Williams, Caliburn Capital Partners Moderator Aradhna Dayal China’s credit market was a hot topic at the China panel, with China credit specialist Chad Liu of Prudence Investment Management outlining the market’s prodigious growth in recent years. “The credit market is deepening in terms of diversity, issue size, and the number of issuers. Looking at the pipeline, talking to state-owned enterprises and the sell-side, everybody is eyeing this market,” he said. HSBC’s Donna Kwok brought an economist’s 14 April 2011 08-17 Forum.indd 14 L to r: Richard Williams, Jenny Tian, George Phillips, Chad Liu, Donna Kwok perspective to the panel, and described the growth of RMB business in Hong Kong, which she expects to hit critical mass as a trading currency by 2015. Northwest Investment Management’s George Phillips noted that a few days earlier at the National People’s Congress, Premier Wen Jiabao gave emphasis to having less reliance on banks for financing and to the development of the capital markets. “This is absolutely crucial, it’s everything to us. It’s interesting to work out ways to overcome barriers to entry such as the inability to short individual shares. There is substantial potential for arbitrage-related profits that can emanate out of China.” Being an onshore manager, Springs Capital’s Jenny Tian had a unique perspective on the China market to share. “We focus on three themes – ‘rising from the ashes companies’ that were pummeled in the economic crisis, especially in chemicals and machinery; new economy industries such as alternative energy space, second- and third-tier retail and health companies; and China financials.” As an allocator to China funds, Caliburn Capital Partners’ Richard Williams noted the growth of interest in China and increasing diversification of styles. “More people are allocating resources to China research. The really interesting development in long/short equity has been the addition of mainland talent, and also the development of big mainland institutions.” © AsiaHedge 19/04/2011 12:41 Meeting Tomorrow Today ASIAHEDGE FORUM KEYNOTE SPEECH: John Ho, Janchor Partners As chief investment officer of Janchor Partners, a Hong Kong-based, long-term fundamental Asia-Pacific hedge fund manager, John Ho is in a prime position to have observed the region’s fickle investment cycles as well as the growth of world-class hedge funds within Asia. In a delightfully witty and thought-provoking presentation, he focused on two key areas that are vital for the success of hedge funds in Asia today: the benefits of long-term investing as well as the alignment of interests between managers and investors Giving the audience an insight into what he playfully called ‘the Asian investor ovarian lottery’, Ho started out by showing how typical investors react to stock price movements over various market cycles. “If you’re a fund manager, how do you deal with the dreaded cycle? In the very beginning, you see the market rising, and you say: ‘I’ll just watch for a while.’ Then it keeps going up, so you jump in. It keeps going up, you’re feeling good, you’re making your performance fees. But then it goes down a bit. You conviction is slightly shaken, but you say: ‘Okay, this is a time to buy’, and you fill up your portfolio some more. Then it goes down a bit more. You start to shake a bit but double your positions because they are at about the same level as when you started buying. “Then it goes down further and gets to half of its peak, and you think it has to be the bottom, but then it falls some more. You wonder why the central banks are doing nothing. Then it falls even more and then you panic and say: ‘Enough is enough, I’m never buying stocks again.’ Then it goes down more and you say: ‘Thank God I sold everything.’ When it starts going back up, you ignore it, thinking it will probably tank again. Then it keeps going up, and you say to yourself, ‘I knew this would happen,’ but by now you’ve sold everything. And so you finally say: ‘What the heck, I’m buying again.’” This is typical investor psychology, and in Asia this happens very frequently, explained Ho. Clearly there are opportunities in this panic but it is hard to break out of this investor psychology and buy when things are going down. Moving on to bridging the gap between manager and investor interests, Ho noted that managers face an interesting challenge in winning the confidence of allocators. “The party line is we will make about 15% annual returns over the cycle, but the question is how. First off, there is the boys-to-men effect: © AsiaHedge 08-17 Forum.indd 15 allocators don’t want you to be too young, but they also don’t want you to be too big. Then there was Hedgegate – the scandals of 2008. Suddenly allocators didn’t have the liquidity they thought they bought.” So the real question is: what do allocators want and what do managers want? “From a manager’s perspective, we want stable capital and sufficient scale. We also want anti-cyclical allocators – it’s fine to have redemptions when the fund is doing well. Finally and most importantly, we want allocators to give us timely counsel and advice. Allocators are one step back and can give us something very valuable to help us focus on the task at hand.” “ Allocators are one step back and can give us something very valuable to help us focus on the task at hand ” From an allocator’s perspective, they want transparency and liquidity, they want to know that when they are told they can have their money, they can have it, Ho noted. Scaled management fees have been talked about for many years – as assets rise, the costs of managers do not go up in a linear way, but their fees do. Allocators want the management fee to be fair, added Ho. They also want performance to be measured over a cycle. Finally they want timely and proper disclosure. “If things are good, tell them. If things are bad, you definitely have to tell them.” Janchor, for example, does not call its investors ‘clients’. “We call them investment partners. If you put these two wish lists [for managers and allocators] together, you can find a way to make each of the four points work together,” explained Ho. He also emphasised that Janchor’s fee structure enables investors to claw back fees over multi-year periods. “We take out each year’s performance fees over three years, in one-third installments (subject to claw-back if the fund is below high water mark). Vesting of fees means that the investors are less likely to redeem.” The firm has three share classes with a three, two and one-year commitment period. Three years is a hard lock-up, though investors have a fee-free liquidity option of 12% in each of the second and third years. Some investors do one, two, and three year lock-ups, which gives them 25% liquidity a year. “We think this is a good model for the industry. Allocators don’t get freaked out, managers don’t get fat and lazy,” remarked Ho. Finally Ho talked about investors having hit the Asian investor “ovarian lottery”. Firstly, because bouts of euphoria and panic create material inefficiencies in Asia, and that means there’s a lot of money to be made. Secondly, Asian markets are dynamic, opaque and not well-researched. Thirdly, structural growth is a given, coupled with growth traps and value traps. There are issues such as weak corporate governance, but that is improving from a low base. Even Japan is improving in corporate governance and this creates a lot of opportunities, Ho added. Also, shorts can be standalone alpha generators, not just a market hedge and there are a lot of opportunities there. And finally there are huge mega-trends, where you do not even need to do research to see them. Janchor’s long-term approach is to make use of having won the ovarian lottery, overcome conflicts with “what allocators want”, and get through the various cycles, noted Ho. “Our universe is Asia including Japan, which has a market capitalisation on a par with the US. But it’s a way more interesting, inherently heterogeneous market that allows us to have diversification of ideas.” April 2011 15 19/04/2011 12:41 ASIAHEDGE FORUM Meeting Tomorrow Today L to r: Richard Cardiff, Rupert Foster, Gareth James, Andrew Main, moderator Neil Wilson UCITS: A structure of choice or necessity for Asian hedge funds? Panellists Richard Cardiff, Coupland Cardiff Rupert Foster, Matrix Group Gareth James, LFG Andrew Main, Stratton Street Capital Moderator Neil Wilson Panellists from diverse backgrounds, all had in common the fact that they have embraced UCITS structures. Gareth James of LFG put it in a nutshell when he said that UCITS is a wrapper that radically expands the potential investor base for hedge funds. “The UCITS platform helps to get to tier-two and tier-three investors where you are getting smaller ticket sizes,” he said. Just how big UCITS is going to be for the hedge funds industry is still open to question despite efforts by regulators and governments to drive hedge funds onshore, said Coupland Cardiff’s Richard Cardiff. “For a while it was 130/30 funds, then it was managed accounts that were going to save the world, and now UCITS. Whether it will solve the problems investors think it will remains to be seen, but UCITS funds will certainly be around.” Many investors are likely to find a UCITS product appealing, said Rupert Foster of Matrix Group. “If you can genuinely offer a hedge fund unit trust that’s very attractive to an audience that’s only had long-only.” It was agreed that not all strategies fit UCITS though. Taking a strategy that does not have sufficient liquidity, or one that requires lockups and trying to pack it in a UCITS wrapper would be like trying to put a square peg into a round hole, said Stratton Street’s Andrew Main. “Fixed income is difficult to fit into a UCITS wrapper, so we’re doing that as a longonly product,” he explained. Regulation: Changing regional and international regulatory winds are shaping Asian hedge funds Panellists Stephen Po, Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission Joe Seet, Sigma Partnership Mark Shipman, Clifford Chance Woon Hum Tan, Shook Lin & Bok Daniel Viola, Sadis and Goldberg Moderator Maria Cantillon, State Street Major regulatory changes looming in both the US and the European Union were the topic of the concluding panel of the AsiaHedge Forum. New York-based lawyer Daniel Viola of Sadis and Goldberg told the Forum that many nonUS-based managers were concerned about the Dodd-Frank legislation. “The Securities and Exchange Commission gave a comment period on the Dodd-Frank rules. We said they shouldn’t impose SEC regulation on firms already registered and regulated in a foreign jurisdiction, but I don’t they will change their mind,” he said. 16 April 2011 08-17 Forum.indd 16 The Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission’s L to r: Stephen Po, Joe Seet, Mark Shipman, Woon Hum Tan, Daniel Viola, Stephen Po said that moderator Maria Cantillon Hong Kong-based hedge fund managers who are interested in tapping US should re- managers can continue to market their funds member that SEC registration gives SEC exam- actively,” he said. iners the right to visit managers in their overUltimately, some managers will have to inseas offices and demand to see their books. vest in the expert manpower they will need to “They are very thorough and intensive. The navigate their way through both Dodd-Frank SEC doesn’t license firms, it’s a registration and the EU AIFM Directive if they have subprocess, but when you file any ADV form with stantial business in either jurisdiction, said Woon Hum Tan of Shook Lin & Bok. “Some the SEC don’t take it lightly.” Turning to the European Union’s Directive managers will bite the bullet and jump on Alternative Investment Fund Managers, Joe through the hoops and get it done. Others will Seet of Sigma Partnership commented that it say it’s not worth it, which is a shame because was thanks in part to the efforts of the Alterna- a lot of people are interested in Asia,” he said. tive Investment Management Association that Indeed, intensified regulation will likely pothe directive been shaped the way it has. larise the industry “into those that embrace it “There is a reprieve for offshore funds to fall and grow and those that don’t, and they will under the requirements of the AFIM regime struggle to grow,” concurred Mark Shipman of until 2018 and between now and then, all Clifford Chance. © AsiaHedge 19/04/2011 12:42 Meeting Tomorrow Today ASIAHEDGE FORUM Picture gallery from the AsiaHedge Forum 2011 © AsiaHedge 08-17 Forum.indd 17 April 2011 17 19/04/2011 12:42