Well, from your perspective, it's should be an educational experience (e.g. you did not realize that most managers are invested heavily in their own funds).Cheerleading for the hedge fund industry is not really a "discussion".
As for cheerleading, I am actually very negative on the future of hedge fund industry. There is no reason why 2.5 trillion dollars are deployed in finding market inefficiencies, there aren't enough opportunities to support that amount of AUM. My expectation is that many hedge funds will re-brand themselves as asset managers and change the fee structure to be more palatable (some already did in the past few years, like AQR). Funds that have true alpha will become private vehicles, which is happening as we speak (bunch of hedge funds became family offices and many hedge fund PMs have elected to join prop firms instead). Funds that provide specific correlation/exposure profiles will become service providers (again, you see that in various forms).
Well, that's not surprising - the market has been on a 12-year tear, thanks to the Fed. If someone was holding stock indices from mid 2000 to mid 2012, the results would be very different.In any case and as a group, money managers cannot even trail the S&P 500:
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/03/15/act...th-year-in-a-row-in-triumph-for-indexing.html