05/06/2016 05:37 AST

The rally in oil has given a fillip to long-suffering commodities hedge funds. After four years of haemorrhaging cash and clients, managers are once again making money and winning back investors.

About $5 billion has coursed into the funds in 2016, with the first quarter seeing the biggest inflows since 2009, according to data compiled by eVestment. Investors are being drawn by gains such as the more than 18 per cent increase reported in a letter to clients by Stuart Zimmer’s ZP Energy Fund in New York and the 12.7 per cent posted by oil trader Pierre Andurand’s $1.1 billion Commodities Master Fund in London. Officials at the funds declined to comment.

“Funds that survived a significant fall in the oil price and in most commodities are clearly real hedge funds,” said Michele Gesualdi, the London-based chief investment officer for hedge-fund investing at Kairos Partners, who oversees $2.5 billion and has restarted investing in commodity funds. “There are not many funds operating in this asset class and some of them are extremely volatile.”

US growth

With crude flirting with $50 a barrel, after dropping to almost $26 in February, gold up about 14 per cent this year and soybeans 24 per cent higher, investors are betting that an expanding US economy will spur global growth. Commodity prices are unlikely to return to lows seen in the first quarter, according to Citigroup Inc., which boosted forecasts for assets from metals to grains this week.

Commodity money managers suffered outflows totalling $6.2 billion from 2012 through 2014, starving them of capital and forcing some of the best-known players out of the business. More than a dozen asset managers closed funds, including Clive Capital LLP, Centaurus Energy LP and firms such as Higgs Capital Management and Mastic Investment.

Now the prospect of higher oil prices is encouraging new start-ups. Luke Sadrian, who has previously managed money for Brevan Howard Asset Management and Moore Capital Management, said he is preparing to open a commodities fund in London in the second half.

Oil upside

Commodities World Capital will trade futures and options on all commodities and bet on an increasing oil price, Sadrian said in an email Wednesday. “Even from these new higher prices, we see 20 per cent to 40 per cent upside in crude oil,” he said.

About 290 commodities-focused hedge funds tracked by eVestment managed $70.5 billion at the end of March, rebounding from a near six-year low of $65.4 billion at the end of last year. Average returns were 6 per cent in the first four months of the year, after a loss of 10.4 per cent last year, eVestment said. Hedge funds have returned 0.8 per cent on an average this year after losing 2.2 per cent in 2015.

Not everyone expects the dark clouds to disappear. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. sees no “sustainable shift in fundamentals” and says higher US interest rates will keep the outlook bearish.

Concerns that China’s faltering economy and its growing bad-debt burden will slow growth will continue to weigh on some commodities like iron ore and copper, which have tumbled 24 per cent and 7.3 per cent respectively this month. That helped drag the 98-member Bloomberg World Mining Index down 9.7 per cent in May.

‘Politically Incorrect’

It’s almost “politically incorrect to say that you’re buying commodities,” but those investing will earn strong returns in the next two to three years, said Geoff Blanning, head of commodities at London-based Schroders Plc. Schroders started a fund with its own money last month and is raising capital from investors to bet on the energy, agriculture and metals sectors.

Will Smith, a former CQS Management partner, is startingan equities fund in London betting on a rebound in the oil price. His Westbeck Capital Management will start trading in the first week of June, spokesman Jari Habi


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