Hi chipmunk
Quote from chipmunk:
What kind of %'s are asset allocaotrs/ institutions looking for?
Like 12% per annum less than 7% drawdowns?
Or 18%+ per annum less than 10% d.D's etc?
Both?
We had this "discussion" before with a very nasty little poster (who thought he was the gods gift to this forum) What % per risk is deemed reasonable?
Ed Seykota says 2.5% per trade...
Others say 0.5%
Some say even less. Any thoughts on this?
The answers to all your questions are in the public domain due to the fact that the track records of all the successful hedge funds/CTAs are public so either eye ball them or run a risk algormithm over their individual track records and all the answers fall out.
I donât know this Ed Seykota and had to google him and then realized he was one of the Market Wizards in the 1980s book.
I donât know how much money he runs or any institution that allocates to him so donât feel that I should comment on his answer to you.
My answer is to scale your stuff in testing to produce the same kind of equity curve the biggest and successful Hedge Funds/CTA have so you can see where your method stands verses the pros.
Quote from chipmunk:
Generally what is Inst. money looking for?
They are looking to sign the Beatles and not get fooled by a one hit wonder.
The required equity curve is in the public domain (see above).
Quote from chipmunk:
With ll the set up costs anything less than $100m+ A.U.M. isn't worth it..2% and 10%?
I am repeating myself but this is a very simple issue.
You have to spend money to make money which means passing due diligence.
Due diligence is what separates the pros in the NBA from the wantabes playing pick up ball in the local park.
This is a catch 22 for most independent traders. They have to spend the time, money and resources it takes to pass due diligence but they donât want to spend the time, money and resources it takes to pass due diligence unless they know for sure they will score an allocation.
This dilemma becomes a judgment call on the part of the trader. If you have an edge and have the numbers that show you have an edge and you are pretty sure you can compete with the big dogs and you seriously want to be rich then go for it.
If you are not sure if the big leagues are for you and you are happy with your current level of success then just skip the whole idea and keep doing what you are doing.
In the professional asset allocation world your risk/reward fit with the existing asset allocatorâs portfolio of Hedge Fund/CTAs is far more important than your profile as a stand alone.
I think the problem many independent traders face is they try to raise money from amatures that look at them as a stand alone investment rather than the professional asset allocators who view each potential allocation decision as just one of dozens of Hedge fund/CTAs with who they have investments.
It is far better to raise money from the pros that look at you as part of a portfolio than trying to convince amateurs that they should try investing in your individual risk profile.
Finally you have to be able to handle size.
The minimum allocation in the professional market is in the millions and for the majority in the tens to hundreds of millions. Any less and the asset allocator is spread too thin and wouldnât have enough qualified people employed to do the required due diligence. You just canât practically manage an external allocation book of thousands of different traders/hedge funds/CTAs etc.
When the standard size of the successful asset allocators pool is in the billions they need to find funds that can pass due diligence and divvy out the cash in blocks of 20, 50, 100 etc million at a clip so they can have an external portfolio of 30, 40, 50 etc hedge fund/CTAs rather than the thousands required if they made smaller allocations.
Now as an aside it is my personal belief and I share it with most professional asset allocators that unless a guy can handle size donât ever invest with him.
If the trading methodology canât be scaled up then it is a red flag that the method is not robust and itâs an âemperor has no clothesâ situation.
Remember they are looking for the Beatles and not a one hit wonder and the scaling issue is the filter of choice to avoid wasting time and money trying to guess if you have wandered into a mine field.
Cheers Smoker