Hedge funds line up bets on Spain's debt woes |
Date: Friday, April 27, 2012
Author: Laurence Fletcher, Reuters
Hedge funds have spotted money-making opportunities in Spain, betting that
market fears over the southern European country's deepening debt crisis have
made some assets too cheap relative to other securities. Managers have been exploiting what they see as the mispricing of credit
default swaps (CDS), government and corporate bonds and stocks, after months of
growing market concern that Spain might need an international bailout, using
relative value trades - betting on one security versus another. "There's probably more juice for relative value trades than directional
plays," said one fund of funds manager who spoke on condition of anonymity. "It's a pretty well-flagged story. I don't know how much juice they think is
in it," the fund manager said of Spanish CDS bets. The moves echo the earlier stages of the euro zone crisis, when hedge funds -
renowned as being among the nimblest of investors - bought CDS - designed to pay
out in the event of default - on
Greece and other weaker euro zone countries. When the trade became more popular they quickly took profits and moved onto
countries such as
France and Belgium. Spain's stocks have tumbled 17.1 percent this year while the 10-year
government bond yield has risen from less than 4.7 percent at the start of
February to more than 6 percent earlier this week as investors fretted over its
debt-laden banks and consumers and its shrinking economy. A number of hedge funds bought Spanish CDS at the start of the month, say
industry insiders, helping drive up the price to more than 500 basis points
earlier this week from below 350 basis points in February. While funds have kept positions relatively small on concerns over lower
liquidity in some credit markets and a fast-changing political environment,
managers are generally still short stocks - betting on falling prices - looking
at sectors such as banks. "We're seeing a little bit of dabbling... Funds are taking a small part of
their portfolios, a few percent," said one prime broker, who spoke on condition
of anonymity. "European equity managers see a lot of fundamental drivers. They're putting
on bets to benefit... Spanish banks can be quite volatile. My perception is that
a problem with the sovereign automatically has a bad effect on banks." RELATIVE VALUE Louis Gargour, chief investment officer at London-based hedge fund manager
LNG Capital, has bought bonds in Spanish companies earning the bulk of their
revenues overseas as he thinks they have been harshly sold off in recent months. "The real opportunity is in Spanish companies that have strong business
models, global footprints and are in sound financial shape regardless of Spain.
An example of this is Telefonica, which only produces 33 percent of its revenues
in Europe and 67 percent from Latin America. "It's an attractive telecom with an emerging market footprint, increasing
revenues (and) strong margins but it's price and yield have been affected by the
widening in Spain and it's pulled Telefonica with it." He has paired this position with a short bet on Spanish government bonds. "We expect the sovereign spread could go wider whereas the corporate
fundamentals of strong well run companies will be realized by the market," he
said. He has also put on relative value bets between different maturities of
Spanish government bonds. For instance, he has bought one-year bonds, which
currently yield 2.54 percent, and has shorted five-year bonds, which yield 4.66
percent - a trade that has moved in his favor in recent days as one-year yields
have dropped sharply. "I think the Spanish yield curve is too flat... I think Spain will be around
in a year," he said. "Sovereigns will have cash for the shorter maturity bonds.
It's only in the longer-term that it (the debt problem) is really reflected." CAUTION Most hedge funds are still bearish on the euro zone's debt crisis, which was
evidenced on Thursday in a string of quarterly reports from some of Europe's top
banks. BH Macro, a feeder fund into the Brevan Howard's Master fund, one of the
world's biggest and most successful hedge funds, said last week that: "Looking
forward, the outlook for the peripheral economies remains bleak, due to both the
fiscal drag and low availability of credit, with rising energy prices acting as
an additional burden." Some funds who have long-term bets on Spanish banks recovering and who are
unwilling to sell at current prices have gone short a basket of Spanish stocks
as a hedge, specially weighted to counter further sharp falls in bank stocks. "If banks are a long-term position for you you've maybe put on a market
hedge, but because banks have higher beta you've overhedged," the prime broker
said. However, not everyone is so cautious. Man Group's "spike detection" computer
program, which looks for unusual price movements to try and predict crises and
which snapped up protection before last summer's debt crisis, has not bought
heavily into protection in recent weeks. "Recently the market has been extremely twitchy. But what do we know about
Spain that we didn't know three weeks ago? It's getting warmer, so the desire to
protest (on the streets of peripheral European countries) has grown," said Sandy
Rattray, CIO of the Systematic Strategies unit. "The cost of insurance has risen more rapidly than our model suggests it
should have done. We haven't been significant buyers of insurance." Meanwhile, some managers have already moved beyond Spain. Philippe Gougenheim,
who is set to launch a global macro fund later this year, prefers CDS on France,
which is midway through its presidential election, or
Portugal. "We all agree that Spain is facing many difficulties, but so are other
neighboring countries. I find it more interesting to buy France or Portugal CDS
at current levels," he said. "France is interesting, as, if Mr (Francois) Hollande is elected President,
he will certainly request an audit of public accounts, which will certainly not
look nice."