Showing posts with label Hong Kong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hong Kong. Show all posts

Thursday, September 20, 2012

NEWS - 25

Viennese firm seeks hedge fund and fund of fund acquisitions

Sep 17, 2012, By Beverly Chandler
(LEFT TO RIGHT) Jim Cone, Michael Browne, Marc de Kloe, Kathryn Kaminski, Oliver Prock, Anthony Torriani, Matthias Knab

Oliver Prock, chief executive officer and chief investment officer of Vienna and Liechstenstein based Salus Alpha Group AG is in the market to buy other alternatives businesses. In an interview with Opalesque, Prock said: "We are interested in buying other businesses, either funds of funds run by people that are done with the business and want to have a change, or maybe single strategy funds of any type where there is a problem with distribution or marketing."

The firm was founded in 2001 by Prock and a team from Erste Bank in Vienna, where they had been responsible for funds of funds and other alternatives.
Prock says: "We felt that the offshore structures for the domestic market that were being offered would be under siege in the future, so our business plan was to create onshore daily liquid products."

This they did by bringing out a UCITS I hedge fund based fund. "We were the first to offer an alternative UCITS in 2003" Prock says. The firm has now grown to 50 people and funds under management of $1bn, with offices worldwide in Vienna, Liechtenstein, India, Stockholm and Hong Kong among other places.

They now focus on specialised funds, structured products and managed accounts for institutions such as pension funds, insurance companies and family offices. The firm started with the retail product UCITS, "because there was no choice of professional UCITS funds so we started with UCITS for all our clientele", Prock says.

Early days saw the firm offering a fund of funds and in-house managing investment strategies as managed accounts. "We didn’t actively market them" says Prock. "When UCITS I became UCITS III, it became possible to have it in an index format so we moved the in-house strategies from their managed account structure to a publicly available UCITS fund in 2007." Their flagship fund, the Directional Markets fund has been running since 2003, firstly as a managed account and then as a fund from 1st December 2008, with an annualised return of 15% since 2003. It is based on a quantitative research model derived by the firm’s research team in Vienna, Liechtenstein and India and it is registered in Vienna.

"It is a CTA portfolio managed on a quantitative basis, covering bonds, equities, commodities and so on but the difference is that there is no technical analysis involved – it is based purely on statistics and price forecasting" Prock says.

The fund’s prospectus lists assets selected for Salus Alpha Directional Markets as predominantly financial indices employing the commodity trading advisors (CTA) management strategy. Shares in investment funds may amount to a maximum of 10% of Salus Alpha Directional Markets’ fund assets and according to the investment strategy, money market instruments may comprise up to 100% of the fund assets.

The fund has a Sharpe ratio of above 1, meaning that for every 1% of return, the fund is taking less than 1% of risk. It has a 34% correlation with Winton, according to Prock. Salus Alpha has a European passport through its Liechtenstein license and plans, according to Prock, to move into the US sometime in the future.

Salus Alpha sponsored and attended the recent Opalesque Roundtable in Monaco. 

Monday, August 8, 2011

NEWS - 9

Hedge Funds Review – Video: interview with Günther Schneider, hedge fund specialist, Salus Alpha

Salus Alpha, with $1.1 billion under management, believes investors want regulated products and has been offering its hedge funds and funds of hedge funds as onshore products since 2001.

From inception Salus Alpha was keen to offer investors transparency and liquidity, according to Günther Schneider, head of global business development and a hedge fund specialist at Salus Alpha Financial Service (Europe). He is proud of the fact that Salus Alpha, now with over $1.1 billion of assets under management in a variety of vehicles, was one of the first managers to offer daily liquid Ucits funds in all its hedge fund strategies.

“Ucits has become such a strong story recently,” said Schneider, but he believes investors need to approach alternative products by looking at the strategy as well as the asset managers’ capabilities to deliver performance. “Sometimes people talk too much about the vehicle and do not concentrate on the asset strategy under management,” he noted.

When asked if daily liquidity is more of a marketing ploy, Schneider is adamant that liquidity is “becoming more important” for investors. “If you look at markets and market conditions, people like the idea of having liquid portfolios. We’ve been offering daily liquid alternative investments since 2003 so we’ve been used to structuring products like that and offering it to investors. Yes, they like it. As soon as they see it is possible, they take advantage of [daily liquidity],” he stated.

In a wide-ranging interview, Schneider explained how he could offer an event driven strategy in a Ucits format as well as offering advice to other managers on the benefits of having an extensive network of offices close to investors. He said it was important to have a “presence on the ground”, particularly in the Asian markets. Salus Alpha has offices in Singapore and Hong Kong.

On the question of regulation, Schneider admitted new laws will “have an impact on all asset managers but hedge funds/alternative managers are more in the focus [as far as regulators are concerned] than others”. This, he said, was a good thing as he believes some of the issues being pushed by regulators, like transparency and liquidity, will be good for investors and the market in general. He advocated co-operation with lawmakers and active engagement, rather than sitting on the sidelines as politicians draw up new rules.

Schneider also talked about the attractions of managed futures for investors. He thinks investors will become more discriminating of which CTA/managed future fund managers they choose in future as those who do well in less favourable markets continue to offer strong performance compared with others.