Title: 130 / 30
1130 / 30 the new black?
- Tommy Adams
- Steven Beveridge
2Agenda
- What are they trying to achieve?
- How did they arrive?
- 130 / 30 and UCITS III
- Can anyone do it?
- Is the market ready for it?
3- Part one
- What are they trying to achieve?
4Whats in a name?
- Aliases
- short extension, leveraged alpha, active
extension, extended equity, 1X0 / X0 - Not a strategy in itself
- Not an absolute return approach
- Stepping stone to a hedge fund
5What does 130 / 30 mean?
- Traditional long fund - 100
- Borrows 30 of stock and sells short
- Reinvests 30 premium in best long ideas
- 100 net long
- 160 gross exposure
6Greater freedom and greater conviction
- Allows managers greater flexibility to express
their views and add alpha in two ways - Least admired stocks can be expressed as 5 short
rather 0.4 underweight - More capital directed towards best ideas
7Increasing the alpha opportunity
- Alpha generation still comes from stock picking
ability - both long and short - 130 / 30 removes some constraints of long only
- But still relatively constrained in comparison to
say most long short hedge funds - net 100 long
- extension part is market neutral
- gross 160
- So relatively benign way of increasing alpha
opportunity
8Equity product spectrum
9Why 130 / 30?
- 110 / 10
- 120 / 20
- 130 / 30 optimal risk reward payoff
- 140 / 40
- 150 / 50 max leverage allowed under UCITS
10 Part two How did they arrive?
11US origins
- First short extension fund launched 2002
- But only joined by a handful prior to 2006
- US investors gt 50bn now
- Mainly institutional and family office interest
- Some 15 of US institutional investors invest in
130 / 30 funds (Source Vodia Group)
12Growing number of products
- Currently most still run as segregated mandates
.. - .. But rapid rise in mutual fund offerings
13How have they performed so far?
- So far so good ..
- .. but not enough funds have been around long
enough ..
Source eVestment Alliance
14Driving forces behind 130 / 30
- Institutional led demand for higher conviction
strategies and alpha generation - Fusion of traditional and alternative investment
techniques hedge-lite - Hedge fund providers as well as traditional
long-only managers see opportunities - Differentiation by geography and asset class
- Facilitated by UCITS III regulations
15Part three 130 / 30 and UCITS III
16UCITS III
- 130 / 30 is a specialist high alpha fund
- Offshore or onshore
- Daily pricing
- Investor eligibility
- Institutions private banks, Fund of Funds,
Discretionary Managers, Portfolio Bonds (Hong
Kong) - Available to specialist retail market in UK and
can be pass-ported cross-border - Dont have to be qualified investor
- No large minimum investment levels
17UCITS III
- Gearing
- Gearing through swaps - gross exposure is limited
to 200 of Fund NAV (130 / 30 160 - so in
theory could have 150 / 50) - Shorting
- No physical shorting allowed within UCITS III
Fund (Irish Financial Regulator has changed
stance!) - ..but synthetic shorting can be achieved by
Portfolio Swap / Contract for Difference held by
the Fund
18Typical swap terms
- Governed by ISDA between Fund and Swap
Counterparty - Fund pays LIBOR X bps for long exposure
- Fund receives LIBOR Y bps for short exposure
- Initial margin with variation margin popular
- Cross margining of positions within swap to
minimise collateral requirements - Monthly and forced resets (important for UCITS
counterparty exposure limits) - Can trade away with any (approved) broker
19Assets held by Fund
- All assets held with custodian
- Valuation and fund prices by Fund Administrator
- Basket of stocks within one OTC swap (long and
short exposure) - Swap will reflect M2M value of underlying
securities less financing costs
The Fund (UCITS III)
Cash
Portfolio Swap Long and short exposure
Physical Stocks Long only
20Example portfolio 1
- 100 physical stocks plus swap
- Separate reporting to be consolidated
- Minimises financing costs but incurs custody fees
- Daily risk management / UCITS III compliance
monitoring more onerous, with separate part of
portfolio - Stamp duty trading costs (for long UK stocks)
30 long
100 long
30 short
Physical stocks
Swap wrapper
21Example portfolio 2
- Allows for cash reserve for any margin
requirement - Vary age physical stock held (dependent on
factors such as markets) - Allows Fund to take advantage of dividend
enhancement opportunities for long positions on
swap and transaction cost efficiencies for UK
positions
- In practice 80 physical stocks plus swap
50 long
80 long
30 short
Physical stocks
Swap wrapper
22Example portfolio 3
- Operational simplicity
- Consolidated reporting facilitated
- Simpler risk management
- Efficient UCITS III compliance monitoring
- Swap financing on total balances
- Counterparty exposure may be greater (monthly
resets help to manage this) limit 10
130 long
30 short
Swap wrapper
23Risk management
- Sophisticated user of derivatives the OTC
derivative is used for investment purposes - VaR analysis used to monitor swap risk exposure
e.g. - Absolute VaR calculated daily (lt5 of Fund value,
99 confidence interval, holding period 1 day) - Relative VaR (relative to benchmark index)
checked quarterly - Risk Management Process (RMP) document lodged and
approved with Financial Regulator
24Part fourCan anyone do it?
25Can anyone do it?
- Increased Alpha potential with similar risk
- Conviction led portfolio
- Shorting skills are paramount
- Many have tried and failed
26Alternative Investment Techniques
- Opportunity for hedge fund managers to widen
distribution - Cartesian Capital UK Boutique
- Previous hedge fund experience
- Recognised shorting credentials
27A different skill-set
- Buy signals may not necessarily be used as sell
signals
28Cartesian 130 / 30
- Launched November 2007 Dublin UCITS
- Number of holdings 75
- circa 55 long and 20 short
- Maximum Long per individual stock 10
- Maximum Short per individual stock 5
- Aim to keep exposure at 160 although flexibility
to be in the range 100 160 - Min / Max net long exposure 90-110
- Aim to keep net long exposure at 100
29Future Developments at Resolution
- Ideas in the pipeline
- Managers in other asset classes with shorting
experience - Rigorous product development challenge process
- Roll out later in 2008
30Part fiveIs the market ready for it?
31Is the market ready for it?
- Developed in the US for Institutional demand
- Growing awareness in UK
- Pension Funds investing from equity allocation
- Retail demand for Alpha.
32Considerations for Retail Market
- Market Research
- IFAs
- Consumers
- Level of understanding
- Support
- TCF obligations
33What did we find out?
- Clearly a new concept for many
- Alpha angle has generated interest
- Keen to find out more
- Consumers Yes as part of a balanced portfolio
- Key emphasis on education
34The new black?
- Institutional interest proven
- Retail wait and see approach
- Is it the new black?
35Wouldnt go that far but
- We see it as part of purple future
36Disclosure
- This presentation is for professional clients and
investment professionals only and should not be
relied upon by retail clients. - This document does not constitute or form part of
any offer or solicitation to issue, sell,
subscribe or purchase any investment, nor shall
it or the fact of its distribution form the basis
of, or be relied on in connection with, any
contract for the same. - Cartesian Capital TM and the Cartesian Capital
logo are trademarks owned by Resolution
Investment Services Ltd and are used under
licence by Resolution Fund Managers Ltd. - Cartesian UK Equity 130/30 fund is a sub fund of
Resolution International Funds plc, an open ended
company investment company incorporated in
Ireland. - The value of the investments and any income from
them can fall as well as rise and is therefore
not guaranteed. Exchange rate movements may cause
the value of overseas investments to fluctuate. - Issued and approved by Resolution Investment
Services Limited authorised and regulated by the
Financial Services Authority. Registered in
Scotland No. SC101825. Registered office
Resolution House, 50 Bothwell Street, Glasgow, G2
6HR, Tel 0141 222 8000.