Get more! Sign up for PLANSPONSOR newsletters.
Hedge Funds Beat Stock Market in 2001
While returns were more or less in line with the equity markets in December, hedge funds outperformed the major indices over the year.
Specifically:
- the Dow Jones Industrial Index, which fell by 7.1% over the year
- the MSCI EAFE Index, which plummeted by 22.6%
- the S&P 500, which lost 13%
- the Nasdaq Composite, which was down 21.1%.
With a moderate correlation, of 0.45 to the S&P 500, and a volatility of around 9%, hedge funds proved a good diversification tool over 2001, according to CSFB/Tremont.
The correlation is a value which indicates how much of a change in one variable is explained by a change in another. The volatility is the rate at which the price moved up and down.
Over the month, emerging markets funds outperformed other strategies with returns of 4.8%, after posting a 4% increase in November.
The Global Macro Index was the clear winner in annual terms, up 18.4%.
The index is calculated monthly and includes the results of 369 funds, drawn from more than 2600 hedge funds, both US and offshore.
Funds must have at least US $10 million under management
and an audited financial statement. The Index does not
include funds of funds.