This article examines differences in average estimated
risk premiums of individual distressed hedge funds as compared to those of their
surviving counterparts, along with a unique measure of performance in order to
provide evidence of why the distressed funds eventually dissolved. The sample
period is selected to cover the sharp downturn in U.S. equity markets of 2000
and beyond, when many individual hedge funds dissolved. Sample data are derived
from a unique database of the five major hedge fund providers existing during
the sample period. The estimation technique is performed on a sample of 212
distressed hedge funds and 1,555 surviving funds of various investment styles.
The main results generally show that for the diverse hedge fund styles the
average risk premiums of the distressed funds are greater in absolute value than
those of their surviving peers; moreover, these differences generally correspond
to significantly lower average performance values for the distressed funds. In
short, the hedge funds with the greatest exposure to the risk factors are the
funds most at risk of dissolution. These results are of particular importance
for individual investors as economic warning signals in monitoring the
performance and risk characteristics of the funds comprising their investment
portfolios.