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Hedge Fund Market Commentary

March 2015

Broad Markets: Equities


Total Return (%)
Month

QTD

CYTD

FYTD

1 Year

3 Years

5 Years

-1.58
1.74
-1.02
-1.55
0.46
-2.69
-1.42

0.95
4.32
1.80
2.31
6.72
3.40
2.24

0.95
4.32
1.80
2.31
6.72
3.40
2.24

7.12
6.04
7.15
0.36
2.18
-8.87
-5.78

12.73
8.21
12.37
5.42
8.60
-5.70
0.44

16.11
16.27
16.43
10.75
7.60
8.44
0.31

14.47
14.57
14.71
8.99
5.81
5.79
1.75

S&P 500 Index


Russell 2000 Index
Russell 3000 Index
MSCI AC World Index
MSCI AC Asia Pacific Index
MSCI AC Europe Index
MSCI Emerging Markets Index

5 Year Risk Statistics


Standard
Equity
Credit
Deviation (%)
Beta *
Beta *
12.97
17.76
13.46
14.40
14.28
19.19
18.08

0.84
1.02
0.86
1.00
0.90
1.30
1.13

0.09
0.14
0.14
0.00
-0.01
-0.14
0.07

Equity markets around the world saw a divergence in performance in March: US markets sold off (although small caps
rallied) while Asian and European equity markets generally rallied (in local currency terms but not in USD terms).
March opened the month with a new all-time high for the S&P 500 at 2,117.39 although the index sold-off for the rest
of the month, finishing down 1.6%. The Nasdaq Composite Index briefly topped 5,000 for the first time in 15 years and
neared it its dot-com-era closing record, but the index finished the month down 1.2%. The big news for the Dow Jones
Industrial Average this month was that Apple was added and AT&T was deleted after the close on March 29, 2015.
European equities rallied over the month on speculation the Fed will leave interest rates at zero past mid-year while
European policy makers press stimulus. However, the appreciating US dollar (depreciating euro) wiped out most of
those gains. Progress in negotiations between Greece and the troika of bailout overseers (the European commission,
ECB and IMF) further boosted European markets.
The VIX index increased to 14.83 (with a high during the month of 17.19 and a low of 12.54) from February's 13.34, but
still remains well below its 20.97 close from the end of January.

Broad Markets: Fixed Income


Total Return (%)
Month

QTD

CYTD

FYTD

1 Year

3 Years

5 Years

0.46
0.61
0.29
-0.47
-0.55
0.02

1.61
1.60
1.01
1.42
2.52
0.06

1.61
1.60
1.01
1.42
2.52
0.06

3.60
3.83
3.92
-0.68
-0.40
0.18

5.72
5.22
6.62
3.10
2.00
0.24

3.10
2.32
4.05
0.63
7.46
0.32

4.41
3.80
5.11
4.29
8.59
0.34

Barclays Aggregate Bond


Barclays Government
Barclays Muni Bond
Barclays TIPS
Barclays High Yield Corporate Bond
BBA 3 Month LIBOR Index

5 Year Risk Statistics


Standard
Equity
Credit
Deviation (%)
Beta *
Beta *
2.80
3.27
3.87
5.25
6.27
0.05

-0.03
-0.07
-0.01
-0.03
0.21
0.00

0.29
0.14
0.31
0.79
0.97
0.01

US interest rates declined slightly in March as the US 10-year Treasury bond closed at 1.92% from last month's 1.99%.
As a result, interest rate sensitive fixed income securities posted modestly positive returns for the month. However, a
better-than expected employment report pushed the 10-year yields briefly to 2.25% amidst a choppy trading month
and led to a sell-off in equities. The timing of the Fed's first interest-rate increase in nine years remains the main focus
for market participants.
The US dollar rallied the most on a single day since 2011 on March 6 as the jobs report bolstered the case for higher
rates at the same time global central banks from Japan to China and Europe embrace monetary stimulus to spur
growth.
th
In the Fed minutes released after their two-day meeting on March 18 , the FOMC dropped the word patient, as
expected, and hinted that rates would be increasing soon (although not until at least June 2015).
In the credit markets, rate and oil volatility coupled with outflows from mutual funds weighed on the market in the
first half of March. Each of these factors turned more favorable as the month progressed, resulting in a partial
recovery from the lows for high yield bonds, which ended the month down 55 basis points. Within high yield, CCCs
had the weakest performance, while BBs and Bs fared slightly better. Leveraged loans (+48 bps) performed better,
continuing to benefit from a lack of supply.

Hedge Fund Market Commentary - March 2015


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Hedge Fund Market Commentary

March 2015

Real Assets
Total Return (%)
Month

QTD

CYTD

FYTD

1 Year

3 Years

5 Years

-5.14
1.01
-4.24
-2.05

-7.52
3.98
-5.23
0.34

-7.52
3.98
-5.23
0.34

-27.10
14.51
-14.61
-0.76

-27.04
22.67
-2.51
6.90

-11.52
14.04
9.20
13.09

-5.71
15.59
13.67
10.03

Bloomberg US Commodity Index


FTSE NAREIT US All Equity REITs
Alerian MLP Index
UBS Global Infra & Util 50-50 Index

5 Year Risk Statistics


Standard
Equity
Credit
Deviation (%)
Beta *
Beta *
15.43
15.69
14.02
11.88

0.71
0.71
0.48
0.78

0.10
1.07
0.61
-0.18

March saw a reversal of the strong gains made by commodities in February and the commodity index fell 5.1% on the
month. Six commodities posted double-digit losses and 17 of 24 commodities finished down for the month. Thanks to
continued capacity concerns and higher production, energy was the worst performing sector this month (-10.1%). Brent
crude, the biggest commodity in the index, fell the most in the sector, declining 12.3% due to higher output from Libya
and possibly an export boost from Iran once sanctions are lifted. Livestock was the best performing subsector with
feeder cattle gaining 9.0% on the month on the back of lower-than-anticipated production.
MLPs resumed their downward trend and declined 4.2% in March, with performance largely tied to commodity prices.
MLPs have declined in six of the last seven months and are down 18.2% since the end of August 2014. Despite the recent
weakness, fourth quarter earnings and 2015 guidance held up reasonably well, with the exception of E&P focused MLPs
which have the most direct link to the decline in crude oil. Midstream and downstream MLPs, however, have not been
nearly as impacted from a fundamental standpoint as production volumes are still increasing, albeit at a lower rate than
was previously projected.
US REITs returned 1.7% in March, outperforming the S&P 500 by a wide margin due to ongoing strong fundamentals as
well as declining interest rates. Elsewhere, Europe (-4.4%) was weak, while Asia/Pacific (-0.5%) and Emerging Markets
(-0.6%) declined slightly as well. Within the US, Apartments (+3.8%) were the best-performing sector followed by
Regional Malls (+2.3%), Office (+2.3%), and Shopping Centers (+2.2%). In deal news, the Macerich Board of Directors
rejected a $16 billion offer from Simon Property Group and took measures to prevent a hostile takeover. The proposed
transaction, which valued Macerich's portfolio at an implied cap rate of 4.2%, would have combined the #1 and #3 US
shopping mall owners.

Hedge Funds: Overview


Total Return (%)
Month

QTD

CYTD

FYTD

1 Year

3 Years

5 Years

0.53
0.57

2.43
2.50

2.43
2.50

2.25
3.77

4.30
5.36

5.36
5.38

4.55
3.52

HFRI Fund Weighted Index **


HFRI FOF: Composite Index **

5 Year Risk Statistics


Standard
Equity
Credit
Deviation (%)
Beta *
Beta *
5.13
4.02

0.28
0.19

0.27
0.25

Hedge funds posted solid returns in March with the HFRI Fund Weighted and Fund of Funds Composite indices
returning 0.5% and 0.6%, respectively.
According to Morgan Stanley, first quarter median hedge fund returns have outpaced both the S&P 500 and the MSCI
AC World for the first time in six years.
Following in February's footsteps, hedge fund strategies across the board produced positive returns in March.
Performance was led by macro (0.7%), particularly systematic strategies that capitalized on trends in the US dollar and
short oil.
Despite a weak equity markets, equity long/short funds still managed to post positive returns. This is attributable to
strong manger alpha generation and ability to protect capital during the March market sell-off.

Hedge Fund Market Commentary - March 2015


2015 Cliffwater LLC. All rights reserved.

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Hedge Fund Market Commentary

March 2015

Hedge Funds: Market Neutral/Arbitrage


Total Return (%)
Month

QTD

CYTD

FYTD

1 Year

3 Years

5 Years

0.25
0.23

1.67
2.13

1.67
2.13

0.91
0.25

3.35
1.41

6.34
4.61

6.14
4.90

HFRI Relative Value Index **


HFRI Convertible Arbitrage Index **

5 Year Risk Statistics


Standard
Equity
Credit
Deviation (%)
Beta *
Beta *
3.04
4.56

0.10
0.17

0.46
0.46

Fixed income arbitrage managers generated profits in March as volatility remained elevated at the front-end of the US
Treasury yield curve. Fixed income relative value managers remained focused on classic relative value opportunities
such as bond-basis trades. In particular, 2-year Treasury futures were trading cheap to cash bonds but long-end futures
were trading rich to cash throughout the month of March. Fixed income arbitrage managers were increasingly cautious
in Europe, as there was limited liquidity in the repo market for German bunds (due largely to ECB asset purchases).
Convertible arbitrage managers generated modest profits in March. Convertible bonds held up well during a weak
month for US large cap equities and the new issue market was relatively more subdued. The long-only BofA Merrill
Lynch All Convertibles Index returned 0.2% in March but convertible arbitrage funds outperformed because of their
focus on lower-quality, high yield or unrated issues, while the index is dominated by large, investment-grade bonds.
While not as robust as February, the new issue market raised $3.1 billion in the US across 7 deals. Convertible arbitrage
managers expect new issuance activity to remain robust as companies increasingly utilize convertible bonds to finance
M&A transactions, raise money ahead of interest rate hikes, and as energy companies seek to improve their balance
sheets. The primary calendar in Europe also picked up notably in March, while activity in Asia continued to be focused
on Japan, particularly on the financial sector.
Volatility arbitrage managers with a long volatility bias generated small gains in March as implied equity and fixed
income volatilities increased somewhat. Long volatility managers are optimistic that the increasing divergence in central
bank policy will result in a more favorable environment with a sustained level of higher fixed income and equity market
volatility in 2015.

Hedge Funds: Credit/Distressed


Total Return (%)
Month

QTD

CYTD

FYTD

1 Year

3 Years

5 Years

0.34
0.25

1.59
0.61

1.59
0.61

-1.73
-5.95

0.76
-3.57

4.95
5.93

5.38
5.48

HFRI Corporate Index **


HFRI Distressed/Restructuring Index **

5 Year Risk Statistics


Standard
Equity
Credit
Deviation (%)
Beta *
Beta *
3.74
5.25

0.10
0.20

0.65
0.48

Credit markets posted losses during March, with lower quality sectors having the weakest performance. Within high
yield, CCCs underperformed (-1.0%), while BBs (-0.5%) and Bs (-0.6%) fared slightly better.
Leveraged loans (+0.5%) performed better, continuing to benefit from a lack of supply.
The worst performing sectors were Metals & Mining (-2.8%) and Energy (-2.4%) while Food/Beverages (+1.3%) and
Housing (+0.6%) were the best performers
Credit Hedge funds generally performed in-line or slightly better than the broader credit markets, with returns ranging
from down 50 basis points to up 1%.
Many funds benefited from the successful auction for Indiana Toll Roads, which resulted in a purchase price in the
mid-90s, exceeding many funds' expectations and resulting in over a 10% gain on the position.

Hedge Fund Market Commentary - March 2015


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Hedge Fund Market Commentary

March 2015

Hedge Funds: Event-Driven


Total Return (%)
Month

QTD

CYTD

FYTD

1 Year

3 Years

5 Years

0.58
-0.46

2.01
2.79

2.01
2.79

-1.16
6.40

1.12
8.81

6.41
12.62

5.50
8.66

HFRI Event-Driven Index **


HFRI Activist Index **

5 Year Risk Statistics


Standard
Equity
Credit
Deviation (%)
Beta *
Beta *
5.18
11.73

0.23
0.52

0.36
0.11

Rising levels of corporate activity contended with choppy markets leading to a mixed but generally positive March for
event driven strategies. As small cap stocks significantly outperformed large cap ones in March this boosted the returns
of many special situations portfolios. Activist managers retraced some of the prior month's gains with an average loss
of 0.5%.
A number of high profile event driven situations were resolved in March. Most notably, the Actavis/Allergan deal, which
was a widely held merger arbitrage position, closed earlier than expected. GM reached an agreement with a group of
hedge funds on changes to its capital allocation plans, and Yahoo! continued to take incremental steps towards
satisfying the demands on an activist investor by increasing its stock buyback. On the credit side, the Indiana Toll Road
auction achieved a better than expected resolution with creditors, including many hedge funds, recovering 95 cents on
the dollar (after the debt traded as low as 60 cents last year).
Global M&A volume rose 21% year-over-year in the first quarter and registered the best start to a year since 2007. In
the US, M&A rose 6% year-over-year and was once again skewed to larger deals; 43% of the announced deals had a
value in excess of $5 billion compared to the historical average since 1998 of 17%. While the size distribution and sector
leadership (healthcare) remain skewed, the first quarter did produce a broadening of M&A activity compared to last
year. This has all translated into increased merger arbitrage exposure across event driven portfolios to the highest levels
since before the financial crisis.

Hedge Funds: Equity Long/Short


Total Return (%)
Month

QTD

CYTD

FYTD

1 Year

3 Years

5 Years

0.51
0.70

2.34
1.67

2.34
1.67

0.90
3.07

3.04
3.54

6.16
4.15

4.72
2.78

HFRI Equity Hedge Index **


HFRI Equity Market Neutral Index **

5 Year Risk Statistics


Standard
Equity
Credit
Deviation (%)
Beta *
Beta *
7.52
2.62

0.44
0.11

0.24
0.12

In March, equity markets pulled back following outsized gains in the prior month, and finished the quarter on a weak
note. Similar to the prior month, there was not much dispersion in terms of geographic or factor returns. Most sectors
declined, with outsized losses in higher beta sub-sectors including information technology and energy which continued
to decline along with oil prices. Healthcare notably bucked the downward trend, and rallied due to positive
fundamental newsflow and industry consolidation.
Equity long/short managers as a whole generated positive returns for the month, despite the market losses. Managers
continued to generate strong outperformance in their long portfolios. Many managers also exhibited positive alpha in
their short portfolios, led by positions in commodity related companies which declined sharply.
The dispersion of manager returns was low relative to recent history. Outliers on the upside were led by managers with
outsized long exposure to healthcare companies, while outliers on the downside were led by managers with outsized
long exposure to semiconductor companies which declined sharply on the month, including Micron which is a widely
held position that lost 11.5% following weaker than expected forward guidance.
In response to recent declines to forward earnings estimates, equity long/short managers have been reducing net
exposure.

Hedge Fund Market Commentary - March 2015


2015 Cliffwater LLC. All rights reserved.

Created with MPI Stylus

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Hedge Fund Market Commentary

March 2015

Hedge Funds: Global Macro


Total Return (%)
Month

QTD

CYTD

FYTD

1 Year

3 Years

5 Years

0.70
0.40
1.06

3.39
1.75
5.13

3.39
1.75
5.13

8.05
-0.62
16.19

9.49
0.33
18.26

2.53
0.36
4.19

2.43
0.46
3.61

HFRI Macro Index **


HFRI Macro: Discretionary Index **
HFRI Macro: Systematic Index **

5 Year Risk Statistics


Standard
Equity
Credit
Deviation (%)
Beta *
Beta *
4.42
4.30
7.25

0.13
0.23
0.11

0.16
0.19
0.07

Global macro funds were the best performing hedge fund strategy in March, continuing 2014's trend. The negative
correlation property of the global macro strategy was evident in March as equities sold off while global macro funds,
both discretionary and systematic, were strongly in the black. A rally in fixed income and the US dollar benefitted most
managers.
CTAs profited in March from gains in major currency markets, mainly short the euro and the British pound. Long fixed
income and short oil trades, which have been driving performance for the past two quarters, continued to add value to
CTA portfolios.
Discretionary macro managers profited from the continued strengthening of the US dollar. By mid-March, DXY (the US
dollar Index) reached 100, a level not seen since 2003, although the index retreated by the end of the month.
Specifically, the US dollar surged to a 12-year high versus the euro and the highest in 7 1/2 years against the yen, both of
th
which led to gains in discretionary portfolios. DXY ended the month up 3.2%, marking its 9 consecutive month of
appreciation.
Most discretionary global macro traders continue to be preoccupied with the timing of the Fed's interest rate hikes. It
now seems much less likely that the Fed will raise interest rates in June 2015, which had been a consensus date for most
managers early in the year. Now, most managers think the hike will occur later in the year, in September, October or
even December 2015.

Hedge Funds: Multi-Strategy


Total Return (%)
Month

QTD

CYTD

FYTD

1 Year

3 Years

5 Years

0.46

1.97

1.97

2.15

3.97

5.94

5.22

HFRI RV: Multi-Strategy Index **

5 Year Risk Statistics


Standard
Equity
Credit
Deviation (%)
Beta *
Beta *
3.05

0.11

0.33

Multi-strategy funds generated gains in March as performance ranged from -0.5% to +1.5%.
Within their equity long/short portfolios, multi-strategy funds demonstrated good stock selection in both the US and
Asia and also benefited from the successful closings of two widely-held M&A deals, Allergan/Actavis and Salix/Valeant.
Managers remained optimistic about M&A activity in 2015 and expected both strategic and financial buyers to
continue to pursue large, complex, multi-national transactions.
US and European structured credit markets were firm in March, holding up better than equity and high yield bond
markets. Some multi-strategy managers took profits on paper that had experienced spread compression ahead of the
ECB's asset purchases, which began with sovereign debt in March. Multi-strategy managers also benefited from the
continued liquidation/reorganization of legacy multi-sector CDOs.

Hedge Fund Market Commentary - March 2015


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Hedge Fund Market Commentary

March 2015

Other Hedge Fund News

Operations:

Hedge fund managers are continuing to have active dialogue with their current prime brokerage relationships assessing
the impact of the Basel III. Several prime brokers have increased financing rates while others have started
to implement financing terms based on the credit quality of the fund's assets. Hedge funds that do not generate
significant revenues for the banks, typically in the form of utilizing leverage or shorting cash securities, are moving to
reduce the number of prime broker relationships and increase the usage of custodians. Hedge funds have also started
to utilize portfolio finance software models to optimize fees paid to prime brokers.
New legislation is expected to be introduced to explicitly define rules for insider trading and prosecutions of insider
trading cases. This follows the recent court ruling that overturned the insider trading convictions of two separate
hedge fund traders.

Daniel Stern
dstern@cliffwater.com
April 10, 2015

"Equity Beta" and "Credit Beta" represent the beta coefficients of the MSCI ACWI and Barclays US High Yield Loans indices, respectively, which were
calculated via two-factor unconstrained ordinary least squares regression using monthly returns over the trailing 5 year period.
** Hedge Fund Research, Inc. ("HFR") is the source and owner of the HFR index data contained in this report and all trademarks related thereto.
The views and information herein reflect the views of Cliffwater and information only through the date hereof and are subject to change without notice. All information has been obtained
from sources believed to be reliable, but its accuracy is not guaranteed. Cliffwater has not conducted an independent verification of the information. No representation, warranty, or
undertaking, express or implied, is given as to the accuracy or completeness of the information or opinions contained in this report. This report is not an advertisement and is not intended for
distribution, commercial use or for the investing public. Rather, this report is being distributed for informational purposes only, should not be considered investment advice, and should not be
construed as an offer or solicitation of an offer for the purchase or sale of any security. Any ratings do not create an investment adviser client relationship. Cliffwater shall not be responsible
for investment decisions, damages, or other losses resulting from the use of the information. Past performance does not guarantee future performance.

Hedge Fund Market Commentary - March 2015


2015 Cliffwater LLC. All rights reserved.

Created with MPI Stylus

TM

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