
Equity Market Neutral
Equity market neutral (EMN) strategy hedges against market exposure with its performance measured by the spread between the fund's long and short exposure. So as other long short hedge funds let profits run on market trends and even leverage up to amplify them, equity market neutral funds are actively staunching returns and increasing the size of the opposite position. A hedge fund with an equity market neutral strategy is generally targeting institutional investors who are shopping for a hedge fund that can outperform bonds without carrying the high risk and high reward profile of more aggressive funds. A hedge fund with an equity market neutral strategy is generally aiming itself at institutional investors who are shopping for a hedge fund that can outperform bonds without carrying the high risk and high reward profile of more aggressive funds. These stocks may be within the same sector, industry, and country, or they may simply share similar characteristics, such as market capitalization, and be historically correlated. Equity market neutral funds have portfolios that are created with the intention of producing a positive return regardless of whether the overall market is bullish or bearish.

What Is Equity Market Neutral?
Equity market neutral (EMN) strategy hedges against market exposure with its performance measured by the spread between the fund's long and short exposure.



Understanding Equity Market Neutral
Equity market neutral describes an investment strategy where the manager attempts to exploit differences in stock prices by being long and short an equal amount in closely related stocks. These stocks may be within the same sector, industry, and country, or they may simply share similar characteristics, such as market capitalization, and be historically correlated.
Equity market neutral funds have portfolios that are created with the intention of producing a positive return regardless of whether the overall market is bullish or bearish. The term is most closely associated with hedge funds that market themselves as being equity market neutral, and it is sometimes referred to simply by its acronym, EMN.
Equity market neutral funds are intended as a hedge against market factors and is seen as a strategy for stock pickers, because stock picking is all that counts. A hedge fund manager, for example, will go long in the 10 biotech stocks that should outperform and short the 10 biotech stocks that will underperform. Therefore, what the actual market does won't matter (much) because the gains and losses will offset each other. If the sector moves in one direction or the other, a gain on the long stock is offset by a loss on the short.
Equity Market Neutral and Rebalancing
At first glance, equity market neutral funds can look just like long short funds or relative value funds. The major difference is that equity market neutral attempts to keep the total value of their long and short holdings roughly equal, as that helps to lower the overall risk. To maintain this equivalency between long and short, equity market neutral funds must rebalance as market trends establish and strengthen. So as other long short hedge funds let profits run on market trends and even leverage up to amplify them, equity market neutral funds are actively staunching returns and increasing the size of the opposite position. When the market inevitably turns again, equity market neutral funds again whittle down the position that should profit to move more into the portfolio that is suffering.
Essentially, an equity market neutral fund seeks to be the lukewarm porridge of hedge funds — not too hot, not too cold, and definitely not too exciting overall.
Equity Market Neutral and Institutional Investors
A hedge fund with an equity market neutral strategy is generally aiming itself at institutional investors who are shopping for a hedge fund that can outperform bonds without carrying the high risk and high reward profile of more aggressive funds. Due to this emphasis on low risk, equity market neutral funds tend to have lower returns than other hedge funds. It is interesting to note that equity market neutral funds can and do lose money on an annual basis, but it is not usually a significant amount. So institutional investors in equity market neutral funds know they can avoid double digit losses it they come to terms with the fact that double digit returns will be just as rare.
Related terms:
Dedicated Short Bias
Dedicated short bias is a strategy where a hedge fund maintains an overall portfolio that benefits in a market decline. read more
Hedge
A hedge is a type of investment that is intended to reduce the risk of adverse price movements in an asset. read more
Hedge Fund
A hedge fund is an actively managed investment pool whose managers may use risky or esoteric investment choices in search of outsized returns. read more
Institutional Investor
An institutional investor is a nonbank person or organization trading securities in quantities large enough to qualify for preferential treatment. read more
Liquid Alternatives
Liquid alternatives are a class of mutual funds that use alternative investing strategies similar to hedge funds but with daily liquidity. read more
Long-Short Equity
Long-short equity is an investing strategy of taking long positions in stocks that are expected to appreciate and short positions in stocks that are expected to decline. read more
Long Position
A long position conveys bullish intent as an investor will purchase the security with the hope that it will increase in value. read more
Market Neutral Fund
A market-neutral fund is a fund that seeks a profit in upward or downward trending environments, often through the use of paired long and short positions. read more
Market Neutral
Market neutral is a risk-minimizing strategy that entails a portfolio manager picking long and short positions so they gain in either market direction. read more
Outperform
Outperform is an analyst's recommendation that a stock is expected to do better than the market return. Also known as "market outperform," "moderate buy" or "accumulate." read more