Fusion Asset Management
Limited Liability Partnership | |
Industry | Financial services |
Founded | December 2004 |
Founder | Kirill Ilinski |
Headquarters | 23 Buckingham Gate, London, United Kingdom |
Key people |
Kirill Ilinski (Chief Investment Officer) |
Products | Investment management, hedge overlays |
AUM | £ 1 billion |
Website | http://www.fusionam.com |
Fusion Asset Management LLP is the asset management firm based in central London and Moscow specialising in managing volatility risks and risk hedging. Established in 2004 by Kirill Ilinski, a former JP Morgan trader, Fusion nowadays is a group of companies managing around £1 billion across a variety of volatility-related funds and advisory services.
History
Fusion Asset Management was established in 2004 by a former JP Morgan trader and the head of derivatives desk Kirill Ilinski to manage portfolios focusing on quantitative methods and risk management. The firm's starting fund, Fusion Credit Relative Value Fund, was one of the first quantitative credit funds in Europe. In 2006 Ilinski set up Fusion Lond Volatility Strategy, a protective strategy, which achieved top positions among other multi-strategy funds in the crisis months of 2007-08 and 2010–11 and became the core of the firm's products.[1]
In 2009 Fusion launched its own hedge advisory and started offering exotic option-based low-cost hedges to the financial intermediaries, primarily funds of funds. Fusion's products were aimed against large-scale FX moves' impact on the investor's liquidity. The same year the company announced Fusion Sovereign Yield (Fusion Libor+) strategy.[2] Fusion’s option products were the first of its kind in Europe to help corporate clients managing their liquidity while minimising the credit-related costs.
In July 2010 Fusion launched its own long-short volatility hedge fund, Fusion Global Volatility, that grew out of the group's long-only volatility strategy that has been in use since 2007. Although, in 2009 the strategy made 10,3%, the hedge fund made only 7% in 2011.[3] In 2011 Fusion also started offering corporate access to its liquidity hedges aiming to provide a bespoke overlay for the group's FX hedges.[4] Managing volatility risks in Aug 2011 Ilinski's team achieved 16,5% return.
Starting from 2012 Fusion expanded its services to the private clients market now offering a range of wealth management solutions including the access to the products usually available to institutional investors only. In 2015 Fusion obtained a license to manage the pension funds in the United Kingdom and started trading under the name of Loyal North.[5]
Operations
Fusion Asset Management utilises a number of protection strategies and specific hedges including FX liquidity hedges. Kirill Ilinski, answering Radi Khasawneh's question on how to avoid heavy losses that can hit volatility funds in prolonged bull markets:
They didn't know how to manage theta (the sensitivity of option value to time) for short-term options with a relatively large carry. As volatility continued to come in, they face mar-to-market losses at the time they need to cut their positions. It is a cycle based on enhanced time decay losses related to the moves of volatility itself. We avoid that by managing theta actively, taking pain quickly by trading relative short-term option over a horizon of months rather than years and we add new positions to the portfolio when the standard long vol good would be cutting.— Kirill Ilinski, Bloomberg Brief, 9 September 2011
Headquarters
The firm’s head office is 23 Buckingham Gate London, SW1E 6LB
References
- ↑ "Fusion global volatility", The Hedgefund journal
- ↑ UCITS Hedge
- ↑ "Specialist vol manager Fusion targets corporates, institutions with new liquidity hedging services", Eurohedge, February 2012
- ↑ "Fusion launches pioneering liquidity hedging service for corporates", Hedgeweek, October 2011
- ↑ Loyal North
External links
- Official site
- Investments & Pension Europe, January 2011
- "Bailouts kill those who could save world economy", RT