FRM’s Richard Keary: some Australian hedge funds lack infrastructure

Australian superannuation funds don’t place much money with local hedge funds because their size may overwhelm the funds and some hedge funds lack the infrastructure to satisfy a fiduciary investor.

“It’s about ticking all the boxes when you’re a fiduciary,” says Richard Keary, chief executive of FRM (Australia) Ltd., a fund-of-funds hedge fund manager.  “Many funds have key-person risk. They’re all about an individual.”

Australian hedge funds compare well with their global peers, says Keary.

In 2008 a typical global fund of hedge funds fell 25 per cent, he says. BT’s fund of Australian hedge funds dropped 8 per cent, he says.

Keary says many Australian hedge funds charge pre-financial crises fees that now seem expensive.

“Why? Because that’s what they need to do to keep their doors open,” he says.

He doesn’t think fund managers should trade on a stock exchange.

“It sharpens and makes more manifest agency risk,” says Keary.

Conexus Financial, the publisher of I&T News, is hosting a conference on hedge funds in Melbourne on September 20. Click here for more information

 

, , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Comment

The AI boom has left super funds with nowhere to run

Whenever super fund CIOs are asked what they’re doing about AI risk, “diversifying” is always the answer. But as cross-portfolio exposures to the thematic grow and grow, that answer is no longer good enough.

Sort content by