Multi-manager platforms are experiencing a surge in investor interest. Consider this excerpt from a Bloomberg article:
“Investors are plowing money into funds that don’t rely on the next macro genius or star stockpicker, but instead offer an army of traders who invest in an array of strategies. These behemoths secured pretty much all of the new money in the hedge fund industry last year, cementing a tectonic shift that’s accelerated since the pandemic.”1
Why are these vehicles attracting so many investors? How do they compare with traditional hedge funds? What should investors consider if they are interested in them? We tackle these and other fundamental questions about multi-manager platforms in the following FAQ.
1. What are multi-manager platform hedge funds?
Multi-PM hedge funds, hedge fund platforms, or Multi-Manager Platforms (“Multi-PM” or “MMPs”) are investment organizations that employ many specialized hedge fund managers and strategies, collectively operating as one entity, where individual units have discrete P&L responsibilities.
Multi-PMs share several characteristics:
2. Broadly speaking, what are the potential advantages for the client of a Multi-PM platform over the traditional, single-manager hedge fund?
Managers of traditional hedge funds are typically sophisticated specialists and gifted investors, employing any of almost three dozen strategies, as defined and classified by organizations such as Hedge Fund Research, Eurekahedge, or Preqin. Investors must not only select which hedge fund strategy is best for the prevailing environment, but also which manager is best positioned to execute the strategy. Consequently, single-manager funds tend to carry net exposures and trading betas associated with their particular strategy. More often they are amplified forms of the manager’s investment views, leading to highly correlated ideas and holdings. In many cases, portfolio construction and risk management tend not to be as sophisticated as their core investment management expertise.
A multi-manager platform offers a range of diversified alpha sources and centralizes the risk management function. The independent managers are thus free to put their talents to their highest and best use. The platform manager devotes a comparable level of expertise to managing risk, ensuring, for example, that all unwanted exposures are hedged and that the independent investment managers are within risk budget guidelines. Simply put, many Multi-PM funds consistently deliver their investment objective and target volatility.
3. Broadly speaking what are the potential disadvantages?
Multi-PM platforms are operationally complex structures that demand a wide range of capabilities from the platform manager, which entails a high-level commitment of time, resources and expertise.
The platform manager must be able to attract and retain multiple talented investment teams, allocate assets, and establish and enforce risk budgets. They must hedge the overall risk exposure of the independent managers and minimize the correlation of their performance. Multi-PMs must also manage high turnover rates while sourcing specialists and developing talent.
Thus, investor due diligence of Multi- PMs must take into account skillsets and infrastructure that in many ways are markedly different from single-fund managers. The same is true when considering different Multi-PMs and assessing the likelihood of consistent alpha generation. Moreover, the due diligence task is sometimes hindered by inconsistent or obscure reporting, limited investment transparency, and fee opacity.
4. How many of these sophisticated specialist investors are there and how big is the universe?
There are over 10,300 hedge fund managers, according to Preqin, a leading provider of hedge fund intelligence, and in the same AIMA headcount study,2 it was estimated in North America that there are 78,500 hedge fund employees with an average number of 19.7 employees per fund manager. Estimated employees in Europe and Asia Pacific were 21,700 and 11,700, respectively. Typically hedge funds are evenly split between investment and non-investment professionals, suggesting 55,600 in the total hedge fund talent pool. However, this broad population represents all hedge fund strategies and not the narrower set the Multi-PM platforms employ.
Focusing on just Multi-PMs, we believe there are roughly 8,500 investment professionals across more than 30 firms worldwide. Both the quantity and quality of trading talent have grown with the strategy. From 2019 to 2023, assets at Multi-PMs have increased from $185 billion to $350 billion3 and during this period more and more investment professionals learned to hone their skills, making them attractive to this style of investing. Right now the universe of trading talent has never been larger.
5. What evidence is there that the Multi-PM structure has outperformed traditional single-manager hedge fund?
For the 10 years ended March 31, 2024, a Multi-PM Peer Group Composite,4 comprised of 34 members, had an annual average return of 7.38% vs. 4.93% for traditional hedge funds, with about half the volatility (See Display 2). Even though this Multi-PM Peer Group Composite outperformed the HFRI Fund Weighted Composite Index by 2.45%, Multi-PMs, with their lower beta and tighter risk management, collectively generated more than 7.89% of annualized alpha when compared to the HFRI index, over the same period (See Display 3).
6. What evidence is there that Multi-PMs are achieving a significant degree of market neutrality?
A. Using the same 10 years ended March, 31, 2024, the correlation of the Multi-PM Peer Group Composite to the S&P 500 Index is 0.17 vs. HFRI Fund Weighted Composite Index of 0.52. Market sensitivity, as measured in terms of beta to the S&P 500 Index, is 0.03 vs. 0.24, respectively. Alternatively, and one of the more compelling ways to show market neutrality, is to view the results during some of the worst down-market periods. Looking at the aggregate (equal weighted average) returns of the Multi-PM Peer Group Composite, one can almost see a wave of positive and negative results, oscillating around zero (See Display 4).
B. Another straightforward way to assess market risk mitigation is to look at the average result when markets are down. Display 5 shows the average return of the Multi-PM Peer Group Composite during every period the S&P 500 index was negative. This is sometimes called “downside capture.”
C. Finally, a bit more technical, if you analyze each return of the Multi-PM Peer Group Composite relative to the market, distinguishing between up markets and down markets on the x-axis, you can see no discernible pattern. But a regression analysis reveals that during down markets (the red dots), the beta of the Multi-PM Peer Group Composite to the S&P 500 is close to zero, with a modest upward slope (0.07). Similarly, during positive markets, (the green dots), the beta follows a similar upward slope (0.07). The level of market neutrality in both down and up markets can be denoted in the R-Squared statistic.5 In down markets the R-Squared is 6.0% and in up markets 1.9%, suggesting less than 10% of the market explains Multi-PM’s returns (See Display 6).
7. How is market neutrality integral to both portfolio construction and risk management?
The goals of market neutrality and generating pure alpha are two sides of the same coin: Both seek to avoid or mitigate unwanted market risk. The two goals shape every aspect of a multi-manager platform, from the selection and onboarding of investment teams to the platform manager’s intricate hedging protocols. Some of the more advanced platforms seek to manage and, through controlled processes, reinforce diversification. By actively monitoring and separating overlapping risks while concurrently engineering steps to promote low correlations, portfolio construction and risk management merge. Perhaps obvious, there are tried and true approaches that ensure tight risk management and low correlations and limit market exposures.
The bottom line is that market neutrality ensures, to the greatest extent possible, that investors are paying only for active risk, not for beta or factor exposures that are easily—and cheaply—replicated in numerous other investments.
8. How does a platform manager ensure that expenses are minimized and that the firm’s incentives are aligned with the investors’?
Multi-PM fees are generally higher and involve variations on the classic hedge fund 2%/20% fee structure because of the two differing levels of management involved. One level of competitive compensation is required to attract and retain the underlying trading teams akin to the 2%/20% model. Additionally, the platform manager who oversees the entire infrastructure and operation, while managing the overall risk and fund administration is compensated. Good platform managers invest heavily in the business, personnel and technology. For investors, the payoff should be reflected in the after-fee performance of the Multi-PM, and we believe this value proposition is reflected in the Multi-PM track record (See Display 2). The complementary skills of the platform manager and the independent managers more than compensate for the total fees, and have generated more alpha, on average, than a single-manager fund.
Platform managers can, and should, do everything possible to align incentives of their managers with investors, with some of the more innovative managers embedding performance hurdles in their fee structures. Such structures shift a portion of the fixed management fees to fees that are charged to investors only when earned by performance. We have seen newer entrants challenge the open-ended structure with some success.
9. What are the strengths to look for in a platform manager?
To attract the best talent in a highly competitive environment, platform managers need to stand out as the “partner of choice” for independent managers. We believe the most attractive platforms offer the independent manager’s risk-taking autonomy combined with a strong franchise that has a global reach, backed by organizational stability and limited business risk.
Investors need assurance that the platform manager views them as partners, investing alongside them, with a cost infrastructure optimized to maximize their return. In this context, “franchise strength” means the willingness to negotiate competitive terms with independent managers, vendors and service providers for the benefit of investors.
Investors deserve a partner that is a fiduciary committed to the highest standards and institutional responsibilities. This includes comprehensive reporting and providing enough transparency or access to key decision makers to understand not just how alpha is being generated, but why it is likely to persist.
10. Why are multi-manager platforms particularly timely in today’s environment?
Hedging unwanted market exposure has always been key to protecting alpha, but doing so has become more complicated and nuanced.
For example, the impact of “risk on/ risk off” episodes in the pre-pandemic world usually was effectively hedged with the S&P 500 Index, largely because factors like growth, momentum and value had reasonably consistent—and predictable— performance during such periods.
But the same has not held in today’s market environment. Investors have had to rapidly adjust to, among other things, hawkish central banks, volatile long term interest rates, geopolitical tensions and two-way risks on both inflation and economic growth.
Performance factors have undergone large shifts in direction and magnitude, and as a result, the S&P 500 Index has become too blunt a tool for hedging. Factor exposures associated with hedge funds have been behaving very differently under the surface of daily market moves.
This evolution of risk led to underperformance of many traditional hedge funds in the last few years compared with Multi-PM hedge funds, which are structurally better equipped to identify complicated changes in factor performance and keep hedging techniques up to date.
Conclusion
Multi-manager platforms share with traditional hedge funds the potential to generate alpha and a return profile that is uncorrelated with major asset classes or performance factors. But they also add a level of diversified alpha sources and sophisticated risk management that is difficult for many hedge funds to match. If this description fits your portfolio objectives, we believe multi-manager platforms deserve your consideration.