Search for a command to run...

Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this revealing episode, David Stemerman, CEO, CIO, and Co-founder of CenterBook Partners, challenges the widespread narrative about the death of long-short equity investing. Despite declining new fund launches and shrinking assets under management, Stemerman argues that fundamental long-short equity managers still possess significant investing skill – it's just being masked by market forces and factor exposures. He presents a compelling case for "responsible alpha capture" as the solution to revitalize single manager hedge funds while meeting modern allocator demands. Through systematic portfolio construction, risk management, and strategic partnerships, CenterBook aims to unlock the pure alpha generated by skilled stock pickers and deliver it in formats that institutional investors actually want. (02:25)
David Stemerman is CEO, CIO, and Co-founder of CenterBook Partners, a multibillion-dollar equity multi-strategy long-short hedge fund. He previously served as a partner at the notable Tiger Cub Lone Pine Capital under Steve Mandel, where he famously pitched Apple as a long position when others saw it as a potential short. After Lone Pine, he founded and ran Canatus Capital, which in 2008 was the largest single manager long-short equity fund with over $2 billion in assets under management.
Despite the prevailing narrative that long-short equity is dead, Stemerman's research reveals that skilled bottom-up stock pickers still generate substantial alpha. (04:59) The problem isn't lack of skill – it's that pure stock-picking returns get masked by beta exposure and factor tilts that create volatility around the core alpha signal. Through daily analysis using risk models, CenterBook can isolate the idiosyncratic returns that represent true manager skill, often finding "wonderful return streams" that allocators are inadvertently ignoring in their flight from directional strategies.
One of CenterBook's key insights is that exceptional stock pickers aren't necessarily great at timing their trades. (13:32) Stemerman notes that while their partner managers excel at identifying which stocks will outperform over 12-24 month periods, they often struggle with optimal entry and exit timing. This creates opportunity for systematic approaches to capture the same alpha through better execution timing, often trading at different times – and sometimes in opposite directions – from the underlying managers while still benefiting from their research insights.
Drawing from chess, where human grandmasters paired with computers (centaurs) beat either alone, CenterBook applies this concept to investing. (25:35) Humans excel at variant perception and identifying future winners, while machines optimize position sizing across 30 longs and 50 shorts while managing risk and factor exposure. This partnership allows managers to focus on their core competency – stock selection – while systematic approaches handle portfolio construction, a task "not well suited for the human brain." The result is returns neither could generate independently.
Unlike traditional alpha capture that may harm underlying manager performance, responsible alpha capture demands strict protocols. (10:11) CenterBook measures market impact, provides transparency to managers about their trading, and critically, reimburses funds for any negative impact caused by their trading activity. This approach is possible because fundamental managers have "long duration alpha" – their insights remain valuable for days or weeks, unlike sell-side recommendations that decay quickly. This allows for patient execution that doesn't interfere with manager trading.
The ultimate evolution of this model is single-manager active extension strategies – essentially 130/30 funds done properly with systematic risk management. (53:15) While traditional 130/30 strategies largely died after 2008 due to leverage issues during market stress, Stemerman argues they can work with proper systematic risk management. These strategies could address the massive $28 trillion in traditional long-only assets that generate zero excess returns, while the much smaller $600 billion in hedge fund long-only strategies generate 2-3% outperformance.