Are Hedge Fund ETFs Good Bets For Only Uncertain Times?

 | Nov 30, 2016 03:09AM ET

The hedge fund investing technique charms many retail investors as they believe that these deploy unique methods or offer exposure to lower risk strategies, and thereby produce some level of outperformance.

Thanks to this sentiment, the space has seen substantial growth lately with new funds trickling into the area. But this perceived low-risk exposure or uncorrected nature to equity or fixed income markets come at higher costs. Investors should note that expense ratios of hedge fund ETFs range from 0.38% to 1.50% while the expense ratio of the broader market fund iShares Core S&P 500 Buy These ETFs as BlackRock Cuts Fees ).

Moreover, thanks to illiquidity (as average daily trading volumes range between just 550 to 150,000 shares), these ETFs have a wide bid/ask spread ratio and higher trading costs. But does the performance of hedge fund ETFs justify the high cost? Let’s take a look.

Performance of Hedge Fund ETFs

If you look at the performance between the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (NYSE:SPY) Trust (AX:SPY) and IQ Hedge Multi-Strategy Tracker ETF QAI one can easily make out how badly hedge funds have fallen short of the broader market this year. So far in 2016 (as of November 29, 2016), QAI is up just over 0.3% while SPY is up 8.4%. In fact, QAI hugely underperformed SPY in the one-year, two-year and five-year frames.