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The role of hedge funds
Hedge funds bring benefits but also risks to
financial markets. Is regulating their counterparties enough to
manage the risks?
To talk about the role of hedge funds in financial markets would
have been highly controversial back in 1997, when Asia was hit by a
very severe financial crisis, which was widely believed to have been
triggered by a group of aggressive hedge funds. Although a decade
has passed during which the hedge fund industry has evolved a lot,
there remain concerns about hedge fund activities in the region.
In fact, hedge funds continue to be controversial as seen in the
market concerns over the collapse of Amaranth last year
and the near failure of two Bear Stearns hedge funds more recently.
Hedge funds can bring significant benefits to financial markets, but
they also bring with them the possibility of systemic risks. On the
positive side, hedge funds help provide additional liquidity to
financial markets and improve market efficiency by taking risks to
exploit arbitrage opportunities. They also facilitate financial
innovation by participating actively in developing and trading
complex and innovative financial products, such as credit
derivatives. The greater risk appetite of hedge funds increases the
overall risk-taking capacity of the global financial system, while
their "contrarian" investment style tends to stabilise financial
markets by maintaining liquidity during sharp declines in asset
prices.
But, despite all these benefits, hedge funds also raise concerns
about significant systemic risk, and these concerns are growing
along with the increasing asset size of hedge funds and their share
of turnover in various markets. There are now around 10,000 hedge
funds around the world managing about US$1.6 trillion of assets,
with increasing retail and institutional interests. Hedge funds now
account for roughly 40% of the turnover of major stock exchanges, a
quarter of credit derivatives turnover, and around one-quarter of
high-yield bond holdings.
Systemic risk is most likely to arise from the failure of a
systemically important hedge fund that has large exposures to other
financial institutions. The failure itself, and any panic sell-off
afterwards, could push up the risk premium, causing a sharp decline
in asset prices that might eventually drain the market of
liquidity. It might also trigger herding behaviour among some less
sophisticated hedge funds. Some people argue that the increasing
correlation between the returns of hedge funds and the performance
of stock markets suggests that some hedge funds are taking more beta
risk than the market expects. Too many one-way bets could create
excessively concentrated positions, which would make the financial
system more vulnerable to sudden market shocks and disorderly exits.
The potential systemic risk from hedge funds is further amplified by
their unstable capital base, which is likely to shrink quickly in
times of stress either because of redemption by the investors or the
fundsˇ¦ leverage ratio being too high. The latter problem is
becoming more acute, because it is difficult to accurately measure
the embedded leverage in complex structured products.
Hedge funds also present new and unique challenges to regulators.
The majority of hedge funds fall outside any regulatory regime. It
is very difficult to bring them under proper regulation because they
can easily relocate to a jurisdiction with lesser regulatory
requirements. What makes the oversight of hedge funds so difficult
is that care needs to be taken to avoid stifling the creativity and
innovation in financial products they bring about. The goal is to
harness the benefits of having the hedge funds in financial markets
while building sufficient safeguards to address the systemic risk
they create. This is no easy task.
Hedge funds also create fundamental changes to the structure of the
international financial system. As Governor Noyer of Banque de
France put it, market dynamics are now increasingly disassociated
from banking intermediation. We have seen large-scale transfer of
credit risk from the banking sector to hedge funds through
securitisation and the use of credit derivatives. The fact that
banks no longer need to bear the ultimate credit risk may weaken
their incentives to lend money more prudently, sometimes leading to
an erosion of credit standards. But the hedge funds, which are the
ultimate risk bearers, may not have sufficient information about the
underlying credit risk of the structured instruments they have
bought. These issues are accentuated by the recent failure of the
two hedge funds run by Bear Stearns that specialise in investing in
collateralised debt obligations with sub-prime mortgage loans as
underlying collateral. While credit rating agencies may be able to
fill this information gap, credit risk may still be mis-priced.
In facing these challenges, most regulators choose to manage the
systemic risk of hedge funds through the regulation of their
counterparties, mostly banks and securities firms. This indirect
oversight approach is desirable because it preserves the incentive
for hedge funds to promote financial innovations. It is also a more
pragmatic approach given how hard it is to subject hedge funds to
direct regulation.
Nonetheless, there are still some questions about whether the
current approach of indirect oversight is adequate to address the
systemic risk of hedge funds. I will discuss this in more detail,
and offer my thoughts on what the best regulatory approaches might
be next time.
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Joseph Yam
5 July 2007
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