These recent, high-profile examples are not isolated cases though, and reflect a wider global trend in place for several years, data compiled from more than 2,600 funds in Europe, the Americas and Asia shows.
The average annual management fee charged by these funds has fallen to 1.39% of the value of a client's assets, from 1.44 in 2015 and 1.68 about a decade ago, according to the data from industry monitor Eurekahedge.
The move by Caxton and its peers to cut fees this year coincides with a sharp slowdown in the growth of assets under management. The hedge funds in the Eurekahedge data have added a total of just $14.7 billion so far this year, compared with $108.7 billion in 2015 as a whole and $343 billion in 2007.
The figures illustrate how many funds are struggling to prove their worth and how the balance of power is increasingly tilting from managers towards investors.
"There isn't a manager out there who isn't thinking about lowering fees," David Saunders, chief executive officer of K2 Advisors, which has about $10 billion invested with hedge funds on behalf of its clients, told Reuters on the sidelines of the Alpha Hedge West conference in San Francisco last week.
The industry's average return on investment so far this year is up slightly from the 2015 average, to 2.6%, but is still a far cry from the returns of more than 13% recorded a decade ago, the data showed.
World's Wealthy
Caxton wrote to investors on Tuesday to say it was cutting fees from the beginning of next year, on a sliding scale depending on how much money a client had invested with them.
The average proportion of total investments allocated to hedge funds by "family offices" — firms that oversee the investments of wealthy families — fell 0.9% in 2015 and was likely to fall further, a survey of 242 family offices by Campden Wealth and UBS published this month showed.
"It's an asset class which probably will face more challenge and more outflows in the next one or two years."
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