"Tepper, Barakett Abandon Stocks as Hedge Funds Shrink Holdings
By Miles Weiss
Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Hedge-fund manager David Tepper entered the third quarter with $3.1 billion of U.S. stocks and exited with $648 million, selling most holdings to reduce risk and raise cash as carnage spread across the financial markets.
``We moved a lot out early because we didn't want to lose money,'' said Tepper, 51, president of Appaloosa Management LP in Chatham, New Jersey. The firm, which switched some money to bonds, has between 30 percent and 40 percent of assets in cash.
The story at Appaloosa, whose returns have dropped more than 20 percent this year, was repeated across the hedge-fund world in the quarter as managers were hit by client withdrawals, tumbling financial markets and tighter credit. Regulatory filings last week by 38 hedge funds with more than $1 billion in assets each show that selling and market declines cut the value of their reported holdings by about 30 percent to $273 billion.
The $1.7 trillion industry, which accounts for about a third of U.S. equity trading, continued to retrench in the past two months, contributing to the 25 percent decline by the Standard & Poor's 500 Index since Sept. 30. At least 75 funds have liquidated or halted redemptions this year. With the Nov. 15 deadline for year-end withdrawal requests now past, fund managers may be forced to unload more stocks to pay off clients.
``Hedge funds generally are the tip of the spear in good times and they are also the canary in the cage in tough times,'' said Andrew Lo, a finance professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management who also helps run a fund for AlphaSimplex Group LLC in Cambridge, Massachusetts. ``They are the first to get hit up with losses and the first to get out.''
It seems to me that Lo makes a case for focusing in on Hedge Fund activity for clues to market movements."Money managers who oversee more than $100 million of equities more must file, within 45 days of the end of each quarter, a Form 13F with the Securities and Exchange Commission that lists their U.S. exchange-traded stocks, options and convertible bonds. The filings don't show non-U.S. securities or how much cash the firms are sitting on.
Almost all the major hedge funds submit their reports within a few hours of the deadline, which was Nov. 14 for the third quarter. Managers of the private, largely unregulated pools of capital can buy or sell any assets, bet on falling as well as rising asset prices, and participate substantially in profits from money invested."
That explains why we're getting this info now.
``Movements in financial markets were so volatile, so unpredictable and so seemingly detached from fundamentals'' that many hedge-fund managers ``didn't feel they had an edge,'' said Doug Peta, an independent market strategist in New York. ``The best thing they could do for their investors was to pull back entirely until markets returned to more of a sense of normalcy.''I have to say that this sounds like a wise policy.
"Some managers sold stocks to build cash that they can use to meet client withdrawals triggered by subpar returns. Even managers who are outperforming have gotten redemptions because their clients need cash and their other funds are frozen.
Funds have also been forced to pare their holdings as prime-brokerage units of investment banks cut back on lending and raise the price of the loans they are willing to make. And many funds may have sold stocks as the quickest and easiest way to raise cash to pay down loans on bets on other assets that had dropped in value, such as energy futures, said Leon Metzger, a former hedge fund executive.
``If you bought oil at $140, you had some margin calls,'' said Metzger, who now teaches courses on hedge-fund management at several colleges including Yale University. ``What you have to do is sell your liquid securities so you can post more collateral.''
At least they're posting collateral.Here's a possible bright side from Bespoke:
"Bloomberg.com's Miles Weiss has a very insightful article on hedge fund activity in the third quarter based on the many 13Fs that were released on Friday. Hedge funds across the board, including the most established and well respected, moved the majority of their assets into cash last quarter. The one positive from this huge selling trend is that when the dust settles on the credit crisis, all the cash will find its way back into the market, and it could send shares up just as fast as they went down."
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