Long-Short Funds Catching On

Oct 1, 2006 12:00 PM, Kristen French


         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines

Long-short mutual funds have gotten more popular with investors in the last few years, as they increasingly look for low-volatility returns in an unpredictable market. In July, assets in these funds hit $14 billion, according to data from Financial Research Corp. The funds first started to proliferate in 1997 after a tax-law change gave mutual funds more leeway to short stocks.

Long-short funds are often confused with market-neutral funds, but there is an important difference: Whereas market-neutral funds balance their short positions with their long positions, giving them a net exposure to the broad market of zero, long-short funds either have a consistent long bias or tend to adjust their long-short mix tactically over time.

The nice thing about long-short funds is they give smaller investors access to hedge-fund like strategies without the high minimums and lack of transparency that you typically get with a hedge fund or fund of funds. They're also less expensive than hedge fund of funds. That said, they don't come cheap. Some long-short funds charge as much as 4 percent, compared with around 1.47 percent for the average U.S. equity mutual fund. Plus, their returns have been kind of run-of-the-mill of late. Over the past three years, a period when the equity markets have performed relatively well, long-short funds were up only 7.5 percent a year on average, according to Morningstar.


Current Issue

Registered Rep Cover

Whole Lotta Love

By Christina Mucciolo
September 1, 2008

These days the wealth management divisions are the shining stars of wirehouse firms.



browse back issues


Featured Book

Cannon’s Concepts For Professionals: A Complete Library of Essential Financial Concepts 

This reference book was updated for 2008 and now contains over 900 pages of information on essential financial concepts and wealth management strategies for your work with wealthy clients. The book not only contains brief summaries of each topic, but it also contains many useful diagrams and charts that can be used with clients when explaining difficult financial concepts. The information in this book meets current FINRA/NASD guidelines....

Bookstore

Rainmaker
Mastering High Net Worth Mastering High Net Worth
Back to Top