Hedge funds deliver; investors commit. That was the key takeaway in Deutsche Bank's 16th annual alternative investment survey, released Wednesday.
"It has been a transitional time for the hedge fund industry," Greg Bunn, Deutsche's global co-head of prime finance, said in a statement. Improved performance and positive flows have resulted in a shift in momentum, according to Bunn.
"One in two investors plans to grow their allocation to hedge funds in the next 12 months," he said. "We found that the average respondent expects to boost the size of their portfolio by $129 million this year."
The 2018 survey comprised 436 global hedge fund investors representing $2.1 trillion in hedge fund assets, two-thirds of the industry total. They included investors from 21 different countries across the Americas, EMEA and Asia/Pacific regions.
The survey found that investors largely met their 2017 return targets, the first year they had done so in four years. The average respondent's portfolio achieved a year-to-date return of 8% for the year to Nov. 30, compared with 3% in 2016.
Hedge funds returned 8.5% last year, according to Hedge Fund Research, the best calendar-year performance since 2013. Inclusive of gains in late 2016, the HFRI fund-weighted composite index had advanced in 21 of the trailing 22 months, including each of the preceding 14 months.
Deutsche reported that hedge fund industry assets under management reached an all-time high of $3.2 trillion by year-end, surpassing the $3.1 trillion predicted by investors in its 2017 survey.
Survey respondents' outlook for the industry in 2018 was optimistic, expecting $41 billion in net new investor capital for the year versus $10 billion last year.
"While investors are committing more capital to hedge funds as part of their overall portfolio, the competition for these dollars remains strong," Marlin Naidoo, global head of capital introduction and hedge fund consulting at Deutsche Bank, said in the statement.
"This is because most investors expect to keep their number of allocations constant, creating a 'one in, one out' scenario. Fund managers need to continue to differentiate themselves via outperformance, bespoke fee arrangements and uncorrelated investment strategies."