Prominent investors offer ways to get returns |
Date: Thursday, July 19, 2012
Author: Katya Wachtel, Reuters
With Europe's debt crisis bubbling along and fears rising in some quarters
that the U.S. stock rally might fizzle, prominent investors have ideas ranging
from betting against Europe's common currency to shorting Hewlett Packard stock
and buying Capital One Financial Corp shares. J.P.Morgan Chase & Co's Mary Callahan Erdoes, head of J.P. Morgan Asset
Management, told the CNBC Delivering Alpha conference on Wednesday that her
single best investment idea is to short Europe's common currency. Famed short seller Jim Chanos, who runs hedge fund Kynikos Associates, told
the conference he had set his sights on Hewlett Packard. Meanwhile, with tongue in cheek, hedge fund manager Richard Perry who was
bullish on investment opportunities in Spain and
Italy, said his best idea might be to buy shoes. J.P. Morgan's Erdoes, asked for her single best idea, offered only three
words: "Shorting the Euro." Having spent time in Europe very recently, Erdoes also said that there are
investment opportunities in undervalued European companies but did not identify
them. Perry, who runs roughly $8 billion Perry Capital, said he likes Italy's and
Spain's sovereign debt. He said everyone else seems to be piling into the
stronger European nations' debt, but said there will be value in Italy and
Spain. Chanos, whose bet against
China has made for headlines in the past, called computer company Hewlett
Packard a "value trap for investors." He is worried about the company's higher
debt level and its fast pace of acquisitions. This is "value destruction via
acquisition," he said. Shares of Hewlett Packard briefly slid on Chanos' comments but recovered to
be up 2.2 percent to $19.29 in afternoon trading. The panelists spoke to a room full of pension fund managers and hedge fund
managers who control billions of dollars. As they search for opportunities, the
panelists worried about the economy, the U.S. presidential election in November
and where Europe would be headed in the coming months and years. Leon Cooperman, who at age 69 ranks as one of the hedge fund industry's elder
statesmen, put up a list of 10 favorite stocks that he owns at his firm Omega
Advisers. Cooperman warned that investing now will take a lot of patience and that bets
might take years, not months, to pay off. Among stock he likes are oil services company Halliburton, lender Capital One
Financial and publisher Gannett. Cooperman also ventured into politics and forecast that should presumed
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney win the White House later this
year, the stock market would jump 150 points. On the other hand he forecasts
more gridlock if President Obama is reelected.