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Greenwich Roundtable and Quinnipiac University release survey of investor attitudes
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Dec. 11, 2008

Matthew O'Connor

The Greenwich Roundtable and Quinnipiac University today released the findings of their second "Survey of Investor Preferences" toward alternative investments among private and institutional investors.

The survey, jointly developed by the Greenwich Roundtable and the School of Business, was designed to capture the mindset of the alternative investment community in light of the recent credit crisis and market turmoil.

"The behavior and preferences of alternative investors is now an early warning system for market action and we are seeing some interesting strategy preferences emerge," said Steve McMenamin, executive director of the Greenwich Roundtable.

"Investors are obsessed with liquidity and the liquidity of their hedge fund investments," said Matthew O'Connor, interim dean and professor of finance in the School of Business and head of the Alternative Investments Institute. "Cash is now king and even good hedge funds are getting redemptions."

The findings of the current Quinnipiac University-Greenwich Roundtable survey fall into three broad categories: allocation to alternative investments, portfolio construction and overall market sentiment. Key findings of the survey include:

Asset Allocation

  • Twenty-two percent of respondents lowered their allocations to hedge funds.
  • Twenty-three percent of respondents added to their allocations to distressed and global macro strategies.
  • Over a third of respondents intend to add to global macro strategies and trend following CTAs.
  • Twenty-five percent of respondents decreased their allocation to long-short equity strategies.

Portfolio Construction

  • Two-thirds of participants increased overall portfolio liquidity by raising cash.
  • Close to one-quarter of respondents noted that liquidity concerns and managers' redemption terms were factors in portfolio reconstruction.
  • Managers are limiting redemptions 80 percent more frequently than they have in the past.
  • About 60 percent of investors said market conditions caused them to reduce portfolio risk. Mechanisms included raising cash, reducing exposure to equities, and decreasing leverage.

Market Sentiment

  • Over 45 percent of investors were bullish on the U.S. dollar and gold.
  • Approximately three-quarters of participants were bearish on the Euro and European stocks.
  • More than 50 percent of members were bearish on European bonds, emerging bonds, U.S. stocks and U.S. bonds.
  • Fifty three percent of respondents were bearish on venture capital and 50 percent were bearish on private equity.
  • About 60 percent of respondents were concerned about the health and viability of the overall U.S. financial system.
  • Nearly 55 percent of participants expect a minimum of six-to-12 months before the housing market bottoms.

The Greenwich Roundtable and Quinnipiac University plan to repeat their surveys of sophisticated investor attitudes toward alternative investments every two months. The next survey is expected to be released in late January. A copy of the survey and results can be obtained by contacting Toni Robinson, chief operating officer of the Greenwich Roundtable. Call 203-625-4522 or visit www.greenwichroundtable.org.

The Greenwich Roundtable is a not-for-profit research and educational organization located in Greenwich, Conn., for investors who allocate capital to alternative investments. Its members collectively represent more than $6.4 trillion in assets under management. It is operated in the spirit of an intellectual cooperative for the alternative investment community to discuss and provide current, cutting-edge information on alternative investing.