Hedge funds are supposed to be alpha producers; however, the definition or description of how alpha is produced is often poorly defined. Alpha is measured as excess return after accounting for market risk, a manager's edge, yet alpha does not tell us what is the tool kit used to generate excess return. It is a measure but not a description of excess return generation.
A hedge fund tool kit list, a set of methods for return generation, provides insight in the ways that alpha can be achieved. These tools can be coupled with a description of alternative sources for return which provides a good list of the richness of choices for managers. See "Investing in Hedge Funds: Why Hedge Funds?" from Mercer.
Each hedge fund style can be discussed or measured through its alternative risk sources. For example, a managed futures fund focuses on cross-asset and variable beta for return generation while distressed debt focuses on complexity, deal, and liquidity risk premia. Using this framework helps to focus our attention on what makes a hedge fund style unique. A hedge fund's edge comes through it tools and sources of return which is manifested in measured alpha.
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