Skip to main content

Performance Sharing in Risky Portfolios: The Case of Hedge Fund Returns and Fees

The Journal of Portfolio Management, Vol. 45, Issue 4, April 2019   Institutional investors face various leverage and short-sale restrictions that alter competition in the asset management industry. This distortion enables unconstrained investors with high volatility targets to extract additional income from constrained institu...
Author(s)
Georges Hübner, Marie Lambert

The Journal of Portfolio Management, Vol. 45, Issue 4, April 2019  

Institutional investors face various leverage and short-sale restrictions that alter competition in the asset management industry. This distortion enables unconstrained investors with high volatility targets to extract additional income from constrained institutional investors. Using a sample of 1,938 long–short equity hedge funds spanning 15 years, the authors show that high-volatility funds charge higher fees and deliver lower net-of-fees Sharpe ratios than do their low-volatility peers. This evidence could be interpreted as a situational rent extraction or as a service compensation. Conversely, increased volatility could result from a manager’s ambition to deliver large net information ratios after accounting for a high fee structure.

See more