Hedge Fund Branding Drives Asset Flows

Updated on

Since the market correction of 2008, a vast majority of hedge fund net asset flows have gone to a small minority of hedge funds with the strongest brands. A recent report from Hedge Fund Research shows that approximately 69% of hedge fund assets are controlled by firms with over $5 billion in assets under management and 91% are controlled by firms with over $1 billion in assets. This is a significant increase from the 2009 percentages of 61% and 86% respectively.

Each year many hedge fund investors are inundated with thousands of emails and phone calls from managers requesting a meeting. To filter through the overload of information, investors are turning more and more to a firm’s brand when choosing which funds to meet and ultimately invest with. However, having a strong brand is not limited to just the largest managers. For example, many investors will allocate to startup firms that spun-out of other high profile organizations, despite the fact they have no audited track record. In reality, a strong brand is even more important for hedge funds with less than $250 million in AUM. Despite the fact that these managers represent a vast majority of the approximately 15,000 hedge funds, they only represent 2.94% of assets.

A brand is an investor’s perception of the overall quality of a hedge fund based on multiple evaluation factors that evolve over time. A high-quality brand takes a long time to develop, but once achieved, it significantly enhances a firm’s ability to raise capital and retain assets during a drawdown in performance. Over time, we believe the trend concentrating a higher percentage of assets in the largest managers will reverse. We expect this to happen due to increased sophistication of institutional investors, poor recent performance of many of the largest, well known hedge funds, the pressure institutional investors are receiving to enhance returns, and the belief that smaller, more nimble managers have an advantage in a performance environment increasingly dependent on security selection. This is especially true for small managers operating in less efficient markets or capacity constrained strategies.

For the small number of new hedge fund launches that are successful each year, their high-quality brand was typically created at their previous firm. This may include having held a senior position at another top-quality brand hedge fund, having spun out of a top investment bank proprietary trading desk, or having been seeded by a well-known investor.

For the hedge funds not fortunate enough to launch with such fanfare, the key question is, what are the firms that have developed the strongest brands doing differently?

There are three critical issues to consider  in creating a strong brand and raising assets in today’s competitive environment: the quality of the fund offering, the investor’s perception of the quality of the fund offering, and the marketing and sales strategy.

The first step in the process is having a high quality product offering. Based on Agecroft Partners’ hedge fund research process which considers thousands of hedge funds each year based on multiple evaluation criteria, 85% to 90% of hedge funds are not very good. With over 15,000 hedge funds to choose from, it is almost impossible for these sub-par managers to raise assets from investors outside of friends and family.

The biggest mistake most of these lower-quality hedge funds make is not understanding the evaluation factors investors utilize to select hedge funds and therefore not creating a top-quality offering. These typically include an evaluation of a firm’s operational infrastructure, investment team and their pedigree, investment process focused on an inefficiency in the capital markets and their differential advantages to capture this inefficiency, risk controls, performance, service providers and fund terms. A weakness in any of these factors can eliminate a firm from consideration. The marketplace is highly competitive and hedge fund investors use a process of elimination in selecting hedge funds. This typically begins by screening the thousands of hedge funds in the market place, meeting with a couple hundred and hiring a select few each year. In some cases a minor adjustment can significantly improve the marketability of the fund. Hedge fund performance tends to be the initial screen which eliminates a majority of managers, but once performance has reached a certain hurdle its weighting in the evaluation process is less important than most managers realize.

The second step in the process of building a strong brand is making sure the market’s perception of the firm is equal to reality. This requires a consistently delivered, concise and linear marketing message that identifies the differential advantages across each of the evaluation factors investors use to select hedge funds. Many high quality hedge funds have difficulty raising assets because they do a poor job of articulating their message to the marketplace and their strengths are underappreciated or unnoticed. Unfortunately, it often takes only one poorly worded answer to get a firm eliminated from consideration.

It is important that the marketing message is clearly understood and articulated by all employees of the hedge fund. The message should be consistently integrated throughout all the firm’s communications including the website, oral presentations, written materials, due diligence questionnaires and quarterly letters. A well-prepared and accurate marketing presentation creates a consistency that builds confidence in potential investors.

The final step in building a strong brand is implementing a highly-focused marketing and sales strategy that broadly penetrates the marketplace while being compliant with regulatory guidelines. The hedge fund investor marketplace is highly inter-connected. Many investors exchange ideas on managers through both formal and, most often, informal channels. The hedge fund investor marketplace is highly inter-connected investors exchange ideas on managers through both formal and, most often, informal channels.  As a result, the more deeply a manager penetrates the marketplace the stronger their brand will become. Building a strong brand and raising assets takes time and cannot be rushed. The hedge fund industry is not transaction oriented. In many instances, being too aggressive will eliminate a firm from the selection process. A majority investors require a minimum of three or four meetings with a fund before they will invest.

One way to accelerate the process is to utilize a well-seasoned, highly respected internal sales team, top-tier third party marketing firm or a combination of both. Experienced and well-thought of salespeople often have a reputation or brand in the marketplace themselves and can have a large impact on a hedge fund’s success in growing their asset base. If their brand is strong, it can add credibility and significantly increase the likelihood of meeting with an investor. Prime broker capital introduction teams can also be a valuable resource to introduce a firm to investors through their conferences or other activities. However, their activity is limited by regulation and should not be relied upon solely. As mentioned before, it usually takes multiple meetings for an investor to conclude their assessment  and it is very important to have multiple people maintain a consistent focus on the sales process.

It is well known that strong performance alone will not attract assets.  The firms that will be successful in growing their business  are ones that stay highly focused on providing a top-quality offering, clearly articulate their firm’s differential advantages and have a highly professional sales and marketing strategy that deeply penetrates the market place.

 

Donald A. Steinbrugge, CFA
Managing Partner

Agecroft Partners, LLC
103 Canterbury RD
Richmond, VA 23221
804 355 2082
[email protected]

www.agecroftpartners.com

Gaining the Edge- 2017 Hedge Fund Investor Leadership Summit – Nov. 2nd/ 3rd NYC

Hedgeweek Global Awards 2017, 2016, 2014, 2013, 2012 and 2011 Third Party Marketer of the Year

International Hedge Fund Awards 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014 and 2013 Third Party Marketer of the Year – US

Hedgeweek US Awards 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012 and 2011 Third Party Marketer of the Year

HFMweek 2015, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010 and 2009 Best Third Party Marketer

Agecroft Partners is a licensed broker-dealer, registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and is a member of The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), member SIPC and a member of The National Futures Association (NFA).

Investments in alternative investments are speculative and include a high degree of risk. Investors could lose their entire investment. Past results are not indicative of future performance. Alternative investments are suitable only for persons who are able to assume the risk of losing their entire investment. Alternative investments often engage in leveraging and other speculative investment practices that may increase the risk of investment loss; can be highly illiquid; may have restrictions on transferring interest; may have no secondary market nor is one expected to develop; are not required to  provide periodic pricing or valuation information to investors: may involve complex tax structures and delays in distributing important tax information; are not subject to the same regulatory requirements as mutual funds or other investment vehicles: can be highly illiquid; can have volatile performance; may have higher fees than other investment vehicles, and these fees can offset profits. Alternative investment managers have total trading authority over their funds. Some portion of an alternative investments trades may be executed on a foreign exchanges.  This information should not be used as financial, legal or tax advice or an offer to sell an interest in any hedge fund. No offer may be made prior to the delivery of the appropriate hedge fund offering documents to qualified prospective investors. Prospective investors should carefully read the offering documents before investing. Investors should perform their own independent due diligence on a hedge fund before investing.

 

Agecroft Partners is compensated by the hedge fund managers it represents. This fee is paid by the hedge fund manager from fees they receive by investors. The manager has a standard fee schedule and is not adding a differential to compensate Agecroft Partners, which means there is no additional cost to the investor in utilizing Agecroft Partners services. Agecroft is not affiliated with and has no relationship with the hedge fund managers it represents other than a separate written agreement covering their marketing and consulting services for the benefit of the hedge fund manager.

Leave a Comment