YouGovAlpha Starts a Hedge Fund
New York - There was news today
that YouGov plc is launching a hedge fun, based on primary research
ideas, with partners Four Capital (Investment Fund) and Numis
Corporation (Investment Bank). The fund carries the name of The YouGov
Alpha Fund. YouGov Alpha is a bespoke primary research subsidiary of
YouGov. The fund will be open ended, and will be seeded with Sterling
25 Million ($50 million) and is seeking a listing on the Irish Stock
Exchange.
The fund will be based upon the research of YouGov Alpha. The
research firm specializes in providing online polling services for
institutional money managers, making use of a consumer panel that
consists of over 210,000 participants in the UK. YouGovAlpha operates
exclusively in Europe, but YouGov has subsidiaries that provide online
market research solutions in other parts of the world.
According to reports, the fund will be based on a pairs trading
strategy, where the fund will bet on the spread between stocks/sectors
rather than the overall market. While YouGov Alpha is best known for
its bespoke primary research product, the firm also does syndicated
research and generates indices. In conversations with the company, the
firm indicated that the decision criteria for the strategies will be
based on bespoke research of YouGov Alpha and the idea generation will
be managed by Four Capital. The fee structure will be a standard 20%
and 2% arrangement.
There have been other hedge funds that utilize third party research
for idea generation, such as Marshall Wace, so this concept is not
revolutionary. But the fund being based on third party bespoke research
is an interesting twist. One concern that we have heard is the
separation of the idea generation from YouGov Alpha. Just how these
ideas will be isolated from the rest of the research product is
difficult to gauge. This is not to suggest that there is any
impropriety expected, but it does suggest that the name of the fund may
be unfortunate. Existing clients of the research product may feel that
there is a potential for a blurring of research ideas. As such, YouGov
will need to have clear policies and procedures in place to provide
this level of comfort.
Posted at 06:11 pm by Ronit Bhattacharyya
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