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Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Winton Group

Hedge Fund Winton's Chief Investment Officer Quits to Launch New ...
src: si.wsj.net

Winton Group, Ltd (which includes Winton Capital Management) is a British investment management firm founded by David Harding. It is a quantitative investment manager whose trading decisions are guided by models developed from scientific research and mathematical analysis. In the United States, Winton is registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission as an investment advisor and with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission as a CTA, and is authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority in the UK. The company trades on more than 100 global futures markets in a wide variety of asset classes and on global equity markets. The firm was launched with $1.6 million in 1997 and as of November 2016 it held $32 billion in assets under advisement. Winton Group has nine offices around the world: London, Oxford, Hong Kong, New York, Shanghai, Sydney, San Francisco, Tokyo and Zurich.


Video Winton Group



History

Founding

In 1996, physicist and investment manager David Harding left Man AHL (formerly Adam, Harding and Lueck), a systematic managed futures fund and created Winton. Using Harding's middle name, the firm began trading in October 1997 with the Winton Futures Fund. When conceptualizing the firm, Harding drew inspiration from Renaissance Technologies, a Long Island, New York hedge fund management company. Winton employs statisticians, engineers and physicists, to pursue investment strategies based on scientific research and analysis.

According to Harding, Winton had difficulty attracting clients as a commodity trading advisor (CTA), because investors preferred hedge fund strategies that focused on the equity market rather than futures contracts. However, using fees that were lower than industry standards, the firm was able to secure investors.

Early years

In October 1997, Winton's first futures fund was launched with approximately $1.6 million in assets. The fund lost nearly 13% of its value in the first month but ended the year up 3.49%. In the following three years Winton returned gains of: 52.18% in 1998, 15.07% in 1999 and 10.44% in 2000. By November 1999, the firm had raised $100 million in capital from investors. That same year, Winton sought investors in the Japanese markets. The positive returns continued until late 2001, when there was a four-month period of drawdowns following the September 11 attacks.

From the company's inception through the mid-2000s, its annual rate of return was approximately 19%. The number of employees and the firm's assets under advisement grew significantly in 2004, reaching $1 billion.

Expansion

In September 2005, the firm launched the Winton Evolution Fund, which was designed as a mixed arbitrage and multi-strategy fund investing in a variety of financial instruments and securities. The launch of this fund was part of the firm's transition, away from the futures market, and towards a more diversified strategy. In July 2007, Petershill Fund, a private equity fund set up by Goldman Sachs Asset Management International, acquired a 9.99% stake in Winton. According to the firm, it believed the acquisition would further increase market confidence in its operations.

By 2007, Winton was managing $10 billion in total assets, and was ranked as the third largest CTA by the industry journal Absolute Return. In 2007 it was a founder member of the Hedge Fund Standards Board which sets a voluntary code of standard of best practice endorsed by its members. The following year, Winton was named Real Business's "most profitable" company of 2008, having achieved margins of 65%, and was ranked the third largest private finance company in Britain by The Daily Telegraph.

The firm continued to expand and "become more of a general investment firm". In late 2008, the company opened a Hong Kong office, its first office outside of the UK. During the economic downturn in 2008 and 2009 the Winton Futures Program held up relatively well with a loss of -5.38% in 2009 after a 20.25% return the previous year. The company launched the Winton Global Equity Fund in 2010 and it received UCITS approval in Europe. The fund was designed to be a long-only, portfolio using quantitative analysis. The Winton Futures Fund returned an approximate annualised rate of 17% net from its inception in 1997 through 2010.

Through the end of 2012, Winton had a positive return on its investments every year, except 2009 and 2012. While Winton's individual funds are established in offshore locations, the investment advisor fees are repatriated to the United Kingdom where they are taxed. In 2013, media coverage of the firm's founder reported that since 2006, Winton has paid nearly £521 million in British taxes, including £133 million in 2011.

In September 2012, Winton became research consultants with Fortune SG Fund Management of Shanghai to help develop China's first managed futures fund.


Maps Winton Group



Organization

Operations

David Harding is the company's founder and chief executive officer. Approximately 70% of the firm's employees own shares or share options in the company. Winton employs approximately 450 staff members.

More than 100 of the firm's employees are academics doing mathematical research and studying statistical relationships and trading patterns. These highly trained specialists are organized into research teams, which peer review and test new strategies, gather data and identify trends. While quant hedge funds broadly have struggled for several years just following the 2008 financial crisis, Winton remains a top recruit of quantitative minds.

The majority of the firm's clients reside outside the UK and many are from the United States.

Investment strategy

Since its inception, Winton has traded as a commodity trading advisor (CTA). It is regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission as a CTA and by the Financial Conduct Authority in the UK. Winton is also registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as an investment advisor.

The firm refers to itself as a "modern investment management company" and employs managed futures strategies using data analysis and modelling to follow trends in global futures markets such as commodities and bonds. After establishing the Winton Evolution Fund and Winton Global Equity Strategy, the firm began offering multi-strategy and equity investment programs that invest in equity markets around the world.

Winton uses research and quantitative data analysis to identify favourable trends in the market and its focus on research differentiates it from its industry companions. The firm uses scientific research to collect data and identify patterns and develop statistical tools, which are applied to its investments. Winton relies on continuous research to ensure its trading models have the highest potential for positive returns. Its trading models are informed by relationships identified through applied research of market data; such as volatility estimations derived from a study of the 1988 corn bull market. In recent years, Winton has further developed its statistical research, focusing on big data; according to the Financial Times, in 2013 its machines processed "the equivalent of 30m King James bibles' worth of information every day". In April 2013, Winton was featured in the BBC2 program Horizon: The Age of Big Data for its use of scientific analysis of data, particularly for its capture and processing of large data sets including historical data for the markets that it trades in and newly produced data from thousands of companies.

Winton's futures trading is highly automated and systematic and uses computer algorithms to trade futures in financial assets including equities, currencies, bonds, commodities, livestock and energy in over 100 futures markets worldwide. Winton uses a mix of long-term and short-term trading as part of its strategy and combines uncorrelated strategies to maximize their risk-return ratio. According to the firm, it uses the same mathematical tools, for research, statistical data analysis, stock selection, and futures investments. From around 2008, the Winton Futures Fund has increased its allocation to cash equities.

Assets under advisement

When Winton launched in October 1997, it held $1.6 million in assets. Over the next 3 years the assets held by the firm grew to over $150 million at the end of 2000. By 2004, the firm's seventh year in operation, its assets under advisement reached $1 billion. In the mid-to-late 2000s, the firm experienced large inflows of capital, leading to its assets under advisement increasing rapidly from $4.8 billion in mid-2006, to $12.4 billion in 2009. Between 2010 and 2012, Winton's total assets under advisement increased by almost $15 billion, from $13.7 billion in June 2010 to $28.5 billion in February 2012. As at November 2016, Winton's assets under advisement totaled $32 billion.


Winton Highland Games - Edinburgh Scotland - Winton Castle
src: www.wintoncastle.co.uk


References


Global Investment Management | Winton
src: assets.winton.com


External links

  • Winton official website

Source of the article : Wikipedia