- The strategy is to invest in companies that have been thoroughly studied (via futures).
- Cash Positions can have exposure to Nifty and Bank Nifty stocks.
- The approach is to invest in businesses that have been extensively investigated (via futures).
- By writing index call/put options and collecting premium profits, options exposure seeks to profit from the market’s course.
- The AIF requires a minimum investment of Rs 1 crore.
- 100 percent Upfront Capital Contribution
- Subsequent subscription/exit – Monthly / Quarterly Redemption
- Management Fee – 1.50 percent of NAV per annum (paid daily) for Class B & C, 1 percent of NAV per annum (charged daily) for Class A
- Hurdle Rate – 12% per annum (pre-tax)
- Performance Fee – on a pre-tax basis, 20% per annually (p.a.) for Class A and B and 15% per annum (p.a.) for Class C beyond hurdle, with a high watermark. The ending NAV (after tax) of the year in which Performance Fees were last charged is the high watermark NAV.
- Exit Load – Class B & C: 0.5 percent of NAV for 3 months from the date of each allotment, above 3 months: Nil
- Nil in Class A.
Why Invest In Long-Short Funds?
Long-short funds can help mutual funds and PMS manage their diminishing alpha and client experience challenges.
Long-short funds provide the most investment options to fund managers. Long-short portfolios, like PMS, are not limited to a specific asset allocation or minimum equity ratio. Shorting and leverage are two further degrees of flexibility they enjoy.
If India is a stock picker’s market for investing in well-performing companies, it must also be a stock picker’s market for shorting companies that underperform.
Long-short portfolios provide a better client experience due to the stability of returns. Long short portfolios, comprising of hybrid mutual funds like equity savings or balanced advantage funds, fall between traditional debt and traditional equity on the risk-return continuum.
As a result, they are less prone to performance chasing by advisers and customers and have lower volatility and draw downs than typical stock funds.
Individuals account for 70% of the industry’s AUM in long short funds, and it is discovered that anyone having 1 crore to invest in a – a successful entrepreneur, a Cxo, or a business family’s family office – has made their money priority both capital preservation and growth equally. Rather with the highs and lows of traditional equities, this client group prefers moderate but consistent returns. This is where long-short funds can assist a client with a pressing need.