Home / News / Regal takes out top alternative manager award, again

Regal takes out top alternative manager award, again

News

Regal Funds Management, perhaps the king of the Australian hedge fund industry, took out the major ‘Best Alternative Manager of the Year’ award last week – not for the first time. The annual charity/awards night attracted more than 400 people in Sydney on September 12.

Simon Ibbetson, a long-time asset consultant and member of the awards’ judging panel, said Australia had some very good managers who had delivered “exceptional” performances, especially in the past year or so. “But while there have been great absolute returns, we are interested here mainly in their relative returns.”

Regal won the top hedge fund manager award in Australia in 2011, 2014 and 2016. It has also won a string of specific strategy awards, such as long/short and small cap, in both Australia and Asia.

  • Kim Ivey, a co-founder of Hedge Funds Rock, the original charity fund raiser, and the Australian Alternative Investment Awards, presented the awards at which he noted that, unlike some other industry awards, the sponsors had no involvement in the judging process. This was left to independent practitioners. The award winners and finalists were:

    Best Emerging Manager
    Realm Investment House (finalists: Coolabah Capital and FiftyOne Capital). Realm is a relative value manager founded in 2012.

    Best Long/Short Fund
    Australian Eagle Asset Management Trust (finalists: LHC Capital Australia and Regal Funds Management).

    Best Market Neutral Fund
    Regal Funds Management’s Tasman market-neutral fund (finalists: Karara Capital and Perpetual Pure Equity Alpha Fund).

    Best Global Macro Futures Fund
    Man AHL Alpha Fund (finalists: CFM and Fulcrum Absolute Return Fund).

    Contribution to the Australian Hedge Fund Industry
    Michael Gallagher (see separate report this edition).

    Best Multi-Strategy Fund
    Perpetual Income Opportunities Fund (finalists: Colonial First State Global Asset Management and Legg Mason and its affiliate Martin Currie).

    Best Fixed Income Credit Fund
    Alexander Asset Management for its Credit Opportunities Fund (finalists: Altius Bond Fund and Spectrum Strategic Income Fund).

    Best Offshore Manager Operating in Australia
    CFM, the French-based global quant manager specialising in alternative beta (finalists: Franklin Templeton and Partners Group).

    Best Listed Alternative Investment Product
    BeatShares Geared Australian Equities exchange-traded managed fund (finalists: BetaShares Geared Overseas fund and Schroders).

    Best Investor Supporting Australian Alternative Managers
    Crestone Wealth Management (finalists: Bennelong Funds Management and Koda Capital).

    Best Private Debt Fund
    This is a new award, won by Metrics Credit Secured Private Debt (finalists: Metrics diversified private debt and Manning private debt funds).

    Best Alternative Manager of the Year
    Regal Funds Management. The award was presented by Andrew Harrison, the chief executive for Australia of the night’s major sponsor, Mainstream (see separate report this edition).

    – G.B.

    Investor Strategy News




    Print Article

    Related
    ‘One plus one equals three’ in Mine/TWUSUPER Team-up

    The $13 billion Mine Super is headed for a merger with TWUSUPER that will diversify both funds’ member bases into new sectors, plug gaps in their portfolios and prepare it for a world where bigger is (allegedly) better.

    Lachlan Maddock | 3rd May 2024 | More
    ‘No doubt’ greenwashing crackdown has had an effect: UniSuper

    To deliver for its highly engaged member base, UniSuper must walk a fine line between investing responsibly for their future and meeting their demands around climate change in the here and now.

    Lachlan Maddock | 3rd May 2024 | More
    What poor investment governance really costs members

    A new report “from the coalface” of super fund investing has gone some way to quantifying the cost of shonky investment management, with members potentially losing out on hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    Lachlan Maddock | 2nd May 2024 | More
    Popular