For hedge funds, debt crisis largely business as usual |
Date: Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Author: Reuters
Hanging tough
seems to have been the right strategy for a good number of money
managers now that it appears a stop-gap deal to avoid a federal debt
default and reopen the U.S. government is on the verge of passing. Hedge fund manager David Tawil
said that, after living through the collapse of Lehman Brothers, many on
Wall Street are now well-versed in telling a real financial crisis from
one that is more of the smoke and mirrors variety and much more easily
fixed. The manager of the $60 million Maglan Capital, which trades mainly stocks,
did not do anything particularly different with his portfolio during
the three weeks Republicans and Democrats battled over a plan to reopen
the federal government, and come up with an agreement for lifting the
nation's debt ceiling. "Those of us
who invest on the basis of assigning probabilities to various outcomes,
essentially gave this one a zero," said Tawil of the prospect of
Congress not raising the country's borrowing ability and letting the
federal government default on its debt obligations. Tawil's
hang tough strategy made a lot of sense with his fund up 34 percent
this year, compared with a 5.6 percent gain for the average hedge fund. Other money managers also said the political theatrics of the past few weeks were more of a nuisance than a real threat. Some
of that is because managers have already been through a series of
politically provoked fiscal crises beginning with the 2011 debate to
raise the debt limit, the battle to raise taxes on the wealthy and the
more recent fight over sequestration and automatic budget cuts. In all
of these situations, Wall Street saw a potential crisis averted by a
last-minute deal hammered out by the political parties. Others,
meanwhile, said there were simply few opportunities to make money off
the drama so it simply made more sense not to make big changes to their
investment strategies. Sander
Gerber, chief investment officer for Hudson Bay Capital Management, a
$1.6 billion hedge fund firm, said there had been worry, but not panic,
about a possible default. He said there was more concern about a debt
default in 2011. During the current fiscal crisis, Gerber said his firm, which invests in stocks, bonds,
convertible debt and merger arbitrage strategies, did not dramatically
change its positions apart from adding some extra hedges to protect in
the event of a default. "The majority of the fund world thought it was utterly inconceivable that the U.S. would default on their debt," Gerber said. He said more damage was done to portfolios, in particular investments in bonds,
by this summer's spike in Treasury yields prompted by fears the Federal
Reserve would bring a quick end to its $85 billion in monthly bond
purchases. The Fed's bond
purchases have helped stock prices all year by forcing investors into
riskier assets. Even with a stopgap measure in place, talk about the Fed
tapering those bond buys might be put on hold. On
Tuesday, Richard Fisher, the hawkish president of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas, told Reuters the fiscal standoff means even he would
find it difficult to make a case for scaling back bond purchases at the
Fed's policy meeting on October 29-30. "My personal opinion is that it's not in play," Fisher said. "This is just too tender a moment." And some on Wall Street are thinking tapering may get pushed even further out into next year. Jason Ader, whose Ader Investment Management allocates money to a number of small hedge funds,
said most of the money managers trying to gain a tactical advantage in
the fiscal crisis were short-term traders. He said an indication that
most managers were not particularly worried about a government default
is that so-called crash protection on Standard & Poor's future
contracts was still priced relatively low as of Wednesday. Even
as the hand wringing continued in Washington, Wall Street kept moving
ahead, with the Standard & Poor's 500 gaining 3.6 percent in the
last five days driven largely by the ups and downs in Washington with
little regard to corporate earnings. On Wednesday alone, with a deal almost done, the S&P 500 rose 1.38 percent and the Dow Jones Industrials was up 205 points, or 1.36 percent. Wall
Street's fear factor, as measured by the CBOE Volatility Index, also
remained in check, hovering around 15 on Wednesday, the middle of the
typical 10 to 20 range when markets are calm. But
even as markets looked relatively placid, some fund managers took pains
to describe to investors that they were not just doing nothing. So
while there was not a dramatic exit from stocks, some managers who did
not want to be identified said they noticed some rotation into more
defensive stocks. This helped names such as Johnson & Johnson rise
nearly 4 percent and Procter & Gamble Co go up 2.68 percent in the
last five days. Jack Flaherty, an
investment Director in the Fixed Income Investment team at GAM, which
manages $123 billion, said managers who were trying to prepare for the
worst were mainly buying put options on the S&P500, betting the
index would decline at some point. If a deal does happen, investors
would likely lose money on those put options, but probably not much. "The
actual outlay is not that much," Flaherty said. "A lot of the ‘shorts'
in the market are of that nature, so it's not going to hurt anyone
horribly when a deal is finally consummated." One
hedge fund strategy that might profit from market anxiety about a debt
default, especially if a deal does fall apart at the last minute, are
so-called volatility funds, which use complex trades to take advantage
of pricing discrepancies caused by gyrations in global financial
markets. These funds earn big returns when volatility is high and bleed money when markets are calm. But
so far, volatility funds have not done well this year, not even in the
weeks leading up to the debt ceiling deadline. To date, an index by
brokerage Newedge that tracks 10 volatility funds is down about 2.5
percent for the year. And today,
with a deal almost at hand, volatility funds may have been hit
particularly hard with the CBOE Volatility Index, or VIX, falling 21
percent, the biggest daily drop since August 2011. (The story was refiled to fix typographical errors.) (Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss and Katya Wachtel.; Editing by Matthew Goldstein)