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by Retric 3719 days ago
There have been several studies out of 100 hedge funds ~20-30 percent beat passive funds after fees in a given year. However, next year the results are random. So, that % drops as the time frame increases.

Survivorship bias is huge in this industry. There have been plenty of funds with awesome runs, but few have lasted 20+ years.

PS: The financial industry also loves to point at old funds as being above average while quietly killing off lot's of tiny funds and growing others over time. IMO, this goes past survivorship bias and into the old con where you mail 1024 people the results of a game, then 512 people you got right, then 256... Until you have great history with your last sucker.

1 comments

Do you have links to any of them out of interest?

There are hundreds of strategies in hedgefunds from HFT to Macro to volatility trading to commercial ground rents to God Knows Whatâ„¢ - so I'd really like to see what was being done for this kind of analysis (and who by and what data they had access to).

Past performance is a lot like the false positive problem in medical testing. A 99% correct test on a condition affecting 1% of the population is not useful. Similarly looking at past performance for a hedge fund is a poor way of identifying those with "alpha" (if you believe true alpha exists at all, which is entirely dependent on your point of view).

Take Mr Buffet as a spurious example. If he leaves the fund, it won't affect past performance for some time. So do you want to buy into B-H without him - just because it used to make money? Or would you go into his new fund because you think he has a process that works.