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Quantimental investing in the new black...

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 Robert Jaeger, Wescott Capital / The Financial Revolutionist Corp.

 Thursday, January 26, 2017

On the back of a disappointing year, Point72’s Matthew Granade acknowledged the obvious when he recently asserted that no matter how you slice it, hedge funds are giving investors “Honda returns” at “Rolls Royce prices” (not that there’s anything wrong with a Honda). Still, the future of hedgies isn’t all gloom. Granade, a former co-head of research at Bridgewater Associates, pointed to his firm’s use of so-called “quantimental” investing, which relies on alternative data sources such as credit card usage, as well as fundamental analysis. The approach, which has gained more notice in recent years thanks to University of Chicago academic Lin William Cong, has attracted skeptics who are not sold on the idea of blending strategies. Still, betting against Steve Cohen has been an unwise move in the past. Cohen’s Point72 posted a mere one percent return in 2016, but we wouldn’t be surprised if its voracious use of alternative data helps the fund to produce at least a Lexus in 2017.


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