A survey by Corgentum Consulting revealed that only 17% of investors feel that prime brokers are the most important hedge fund service provider.
The findings are despite the emphasis placed on these service providers following the Lehman crisis and represent an apparent pendulum shift by these investors in their attitude towards prime brokers.
Jason Scharfman, managing partner of Corgentum Consulting, which provides hedge fund operational diligence reviews, says: “The survey data indicates a potentially dangerous shift in the opposite direction signifying that investors have reverted to their old ways and are devaluing the role of prime brokers.”
The survey respondents represent a wide variety of hedge fund investors ranging from ultra-high net worth individuals and family offices to fund of hedge funds, pensions and endowments. Administrators (33%) and auditors (31%) were identified as the most important providers to this market.
When asked who investors felt service providers owe their primary allegiance to, the vast majority (74%) felt administrators are committed to investors.
“This highlights a surprising disconnect between the operational realities of hedge fund investing versus investor’s beliefs because administrators are hired and compensated by hedge funds and not investors,” Scharfman said.
Additional findings include:-The biggest concerns investors have about hedge fund service providers are capital loss (35%) and reputational risks (32%). This is an emerging trend as traditionally, investors have been more focused on valuation related risks and the level of service available from the provider.- Investors are increasingly relying on administrators to perform asset verification (48%) and are still concerned with valuation (24%). Additionally, the data shows that investors are minimizing the importance of critical administrator functions, such as cash management (14%) and fund governance (7%).
(JDC)