Hedge funds brace for euro zone break-up |
Date: Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Author: Laurence Fletcher, Reuters
Nervous hedge funds managers are stress-testing their portfolios and
searching for ways of protecting themselves against their worst nightmare -- a
potential break-up of the
euro zone. With talks on restructuring Greece's debt mountain still deadlocked, and the
exit of one of more countries from the euro seen as a small but definite
possibility, funds are modeling scenarios ranging from a 50 percent slump in
European stocks or a 45 percent fall in the oil price to a 30 percent rise in
gold. Managers are also trying to dig out old computer programs they once used to
model the behavior of
currencies such as the drachma or the deutschmark as they prepare for an
event for which -- even after the 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers -- they
effectively have no precedent. Many, having already trimmed risk, are piling into credit default swaps or
deeply out-of-the-money options, hoping they pick a counterparty that can
withstand the shock of a break-up. "You can't conceive what this event will be like, but it doesn't absolve you
of looking at it," said the chief risk officer at one hedge fund firm who asked
not to be named. "People are asking the questions, 'do I have the historical records on how
things worked when there was a deutschmark?' and 'did I throw away those
computer programs (modeling the deutschmark)?'." Funds are also trying to figure out how they might be affected if different
asset classes that normally have a low correlation start to fall sharply at the
same time. "Anyone who's a chief risk officer is running these scenarios -- say if the
euro falls 15 percent, stocks fall 25 percent, if the possibility of default
increases, what if recovery rates falls, which prime brokers, administrators get
hit?" said Mark Wightman, head of strategy for Asia-Pacific at specialist
technology group SunGard. "The scenarios are getting quite complicated and people are starting looking
at correlations between things to understand the likely impact." PROTECTION While hedge funds, which can put on short positions, have more tools at their
disposal than long-only funds to cope with market falls, their performance has
been patchy. Last year they lost just over 5 percent on average, according to Hedge Fund
Research, while the S&P 500 delivered a total return of 2.1 percent. That was
their second calendar year of losses in just four years after heavy losses
during the credit crisis in 2008. Many hedge funds have already cut exposure to assets seen as directly in the
firing line such as the euro or European stocks, insiders say, but are finding
their options limited. "We're all still trying to run our businesses right now. I'd like to say I'll
put everything in U.S. dollars, but you can't," the hedge fund chief risk
officer said. "Part of it is contingency planning -- what you need to get out of first --
and part is proactive -- 'I don't need so much emphasis in a certain area right
now', such as European stocks or the euro," he said. "Certainly we are taking smaller positions in some of these markets." Some funds also rejigged their equity short positions after major differences
between stronger, core economies such as
Germany and weaker peripheral economies became more apparent, said one
investor who spoke on condition of anonymity. For instance, a manager who owned shares in a German bank whilst shorting a
Greek bank has switched to hedging the German bank with a short position on
another German bank, after the Greek bank's shares "started to take on a life of
their own" as a result of the country's debt crisis, the investor said. However, with uncertainty over which currencies would exist after a break-up
and how they would behave, funds are still unsure how far their hedges would
protect them. "A hedge fund may have a hedging program that is very highly attuned to
dealing with its positions. But the day after something happens there's no
program to deal with this and their hedge may be denominated in a new currency,"
the risk officer said. AVOIDING CONTAGION Part of the dilemma is a mistrust of value at risk (VaR), a standard measure
used by banks to show estimated potential loss, expressed with a certain
percentage level of confidence. "A traditional measure of risk like VaR has nothing to say on this," said
Lance Smith, CEO at U.S.-based Imagine Software, which has been working with
hedge funds to assess the impact of a euro zone break-up on their portfolios. "A euro break-up could be a 7 standard deviation event. A 6.5 standard
deviation event occurs once every 34 million years, while a 50 percent fall in
the Eurostoxx would be a 21 standard deviation event. This just highlights the
flaws in a standard statistical approach." Credit default swaps (CDS), which are meant to pay out in the event of
default, currency options or deeply out-of-the-money options, are among the
favored hedges, industry executives say, which has driven up option prices. However, even here there is a concern over whether the counterparty can pay
up. "You watch the counterpart if (it's) OTC (over-the-counter) to avoid
contagion," said Sungard's Wightman. "Thus you do your euro trades with say
Japanese, U.S., Asian or Australian institutions." Meanwhile, one hedge fund manager has structured a trade to buy German bunds
whilst offsetting this with credit default swaps, one fund selector told
Reuters. "His base case is that if someone comes out of the euro, the German bund will
be the place to be."