Hedge Fund network ties can lead to inferior performance and increased
risks.
When actors invest in making strong network ties (relationships) with other
actors, such ties can potentially influence behavior and subsequent financial
performance, but the strength and direction of these effects is debated. Using
original fine-grained data that documents the nature and extent of the
relationships between Hedge Funds through their Prime Brokers (banks that
provide leverage, issue credit lines and serve as bridges between Hedge Funds)
we probe the social topology of Hedge Fund to Hedge Fund relationships that
shapes this global alternative asset market. Contrasting much recent research
that tends to stress the positive effects of network relationships, we find
that investing in network relationships in this industry appears to have a
"dark side" in terms of both performance and risk taking; where we probe
various measures of both performance and risk in line with recent finance
literature. We explore the reasons for these effects, and conclude that
investing in Hedge Fund to Hedge Fund network ties can lead to inferior
performance and increased risks that may not benefit the investor.