Hedge funds aim to make money whether markets go up or down. They use specialized strategies that differ from traditional stock and bond investing. Understanding these approaches helps investors evaluate if hedge funds fit their goals.
Hedge funds can use leverage, short selling, and derivatives. These tools magnify both gains and losses.
The following table shows the main hedge fund strategy categories and their typical risk-return profiles.
| Strategy Name | How It Works | Typical Return Target | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Long/Short Equity | Buy undervalued stocks, sell short overvalued ones | 8-12% annually | Moderate |
| Global Macro | Bet on big economic trends across countries | 10-15% annually | High |
| Event-Driven | Profit from mergers, bankruptcies, restructurings | 8-12% annually | Moderate-High |
| Relative Value | Exploit price gaps between related securities | 5-8% annually | Low-Moderate |
| Managed Futures | Trade futures on trends in commodities, currencies, rates | 6-10% annually | Moderate |
| Multi-Strategy | Combine several strategies in one fund | 7-12% annually | Varies |
Each strategy reacts differently to market stress. The next table shows how these strategies performed during key market events.
| Strategy | 2008 Financial Crisis | 2020 COVID Crash | 2022 Rate Hikes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Long/Short Equity | -15 to -25 | -5 to -15 | -10 to -20 |
| Global Macro | +10 to +20 | +5 to +15 | +8 to +18 |
| Event-Driven | -20 to -30 | -10 to -20 | -5 to -15 |
| Relative Value | -5 to -15 | -2 to -8 | +2 to +8 |
| Managed Futures | +15 to +25 | +10 to +20 | +12 to +22 |
During the 2008 crash, Bridgewater's Pure Alpha fund (Global Macro) gained about 14%. Meanwhile, many stock-heavy Long/Short funds lost 20% or more.
This shows how strategy choice matters more than "hedge fund" label alone.
Fees eat into returns significantly. Hedge funds typically charge more than regular funds. The table below breaks down common fee structures.
| Fee Component | Standard Rate | What It Means for Investors |
|---|---|---|
| Management Fee | 1.5-2% of assets yearly | Paid even if the fund loses money |
| Performance Fee | 15-20% of profits | Fund keeps share of gains above a hurdle |
| Hurdle Rate | 0-8% return threshold | Performance fee only kicks in after this return |
| High Water Mark | Variable | No performance fee until past losses recovered |
| Lock-up Period | 1-3 years common | Money cannot be withdrawn during this time |
| Redemption Notice | 30-90 days typical | Advance notice required to withdraw funds |
Some newer funds offer lower fees (1% management / 10% performance) to attract capital.
A fund earning 10% gross returns with 2% management and 20% performance fees leaves investors with about 7.6% net.
Over 10 years, this fee drag compounds to significant lost wealth.
Recent performance data shows hedge funds as a group have struggled to beat simple indexes. Yet top performers still deliver value. The table below compares aggregate hedge fund returns to benchmarks.
| Year | HFRI Fund Weighted Composite | S&P 500 | Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | 10.4 | 31.5 | 8.7 |
| 2020 | 9.9 | 18.4 | 7.5 |
| 2021 | 10.3 | 28.7 | -1.5 |
| 2022 | -4.2 | -18.1 | -13.0 |
| 2023 | 7.2 | 26.3 | 5.5 |
| 2024 (YTD Sept) | 9.5 | 20.1 | 4.5 |
Pershing Square, run by Bill Ackman, returned 70% in 2020 using activist and event-driven strategies. This far exceeded the average hedge fund.
However, the same fund lost 20% in 2015-2016 after a bad bet on Valeant Pharmaceuticals.
Access to hedge funds remains limited. Most require accredited investor status or large minimum investments. Liquid alternatives now offer similar strategies in mutual fund formats.
Match strategy to your risk tolerance and time horizon. A 3-year lock-up with quarterly liquidity does not work if you need cash next month.
Study the manager's track record across full market cycles, not just good years.
Key Takeaways
The final table summarizes what matters most for anyone considering hedge fund investments.
| Key Point | What It Means | Action Item |
|---|---|---|
| Strategy diversity | Not all hedge funds are alike; risks vary hugely | Read the fund's strategy description carefully |
| Fee impact | High fees erode long-term returns substantially | Compare fee structures; negotiate if possible |
| Liquidity constraints | Your money may be locked up for years | Only invest capital you will not need urgently |
| Performance dispersion | Top funds outperform averages by wide margins | Focus on manager skill, not just strategy label |
| Correlation benefits | Some strategies zig when stocks zag | Use as portfolio diversifier, not return chase |
| Due diligence | Fraud and blow-ups still occur | Verify auditor, custody arrangements, and compliance history |