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Hedge Fund performance evaluation using the Sharpe and Omega ratios.

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dc.contributor.author Van Dyk, Francois
dc.contributor.author van Vuuren, Gary
dc.contributor.author Heymans, Andre
dc.date.accessioned 2015-01-26T14:55:00Z
dc.date.available 2015-01-26T14:55:00Z
dc.date.issued 2014-05
dc.identifier.citation Van Dyk, F., van Vuuren, G., Heymans, A. 2014. Hedge Fund performance evaluation using the Sharpe and Omega ratios. International Business & Economic Research Journal, 13(3):485-512. en
dc.identifier.issn 2157-9393 (online)
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18207
dc.description Van Dyk, F., van Vuuren, G., Heymans, A. 2014. Hedge Fund performance evaluation using the Sharpe and Omega ratios. International Business & Economic Research Journal, 13(3):485-512. en
dc.description.abstract The Sharpe ratio is widely used as a performance evaluation measure for traditional (i.e., long only) investment funds as well as less-conventional funds such as hedge funds. Based on mean-variance theory, the Sharpe ratio only considers the first two moments of return distributions, so hedge funds – characterised by asymmetric, highly-skewed returns with non-negligible higher moments – may be misdiagnosed in terms of performance. The Sharpe ratio is also susceptible to manipulation and estimation error. These drawbacks have demonstrated the need for augmented measures, or, in some cases, replacement fund performance metrics. Over the period January 2000 to December 2011 the monthly returns of 184 international long/short (equity) hedge funds with geographical investment mandates spanning North America, Europe, and Asia were examined. This study compares results obtained using the Sharpe ratio (in which returns are assumed to be serially uncorrelated) with those obtained using a technique which does account for serial return correlation. Standard techniques for annualising Sharpe ratios, based on monthly estimators, do not account for this effect. In addition, this study assesses whether the Omega ratio supplements the Sharpe Ratio in the evaluation of hedge fund risk and thus in the investment decision-making process. The Omega and Sharpe ratios were estimated on a rolling basis to ascertain whether the Omega ratio does indeed provide useful additional information to investors to that provided by the Sharpe ratio alone. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher The Clute Institute en
dc.rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 South Africa *
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/za/ *
dc.subject Hedge Funds; Omega Ratio; Sharpe Ratio; Risk Management en
dc.title Hedge Fund performance evaluation using the Sharpe and Omega ratios. en
dc.type Article en
dc.description.department Business Management en


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