Tag Archives: hedge

Jeremy Siegel says Treasurys crashed because everyone forgot they’re a bad inflation hedge while stocks ‘do beautifully’ – Yahoo Finance

  1. Jeremy Siegel says Treasurys crashed because everyone forgot they’re a bad inflation hedge while stocks ‘do beautifully’ Yahoo Finance
  2. ‘Bond math’ shows traders bold enough to bet on Treasurys could reap dazzling returns with little risk MarketWatch
  3. Bonds have proven to been a very bad hedge against inflation, says Wharton’s Jeremy Siegel CNBC Television
  4. Treasury Bonds Crashed Because They’re a Bad Inflation Hedge: Jeremy Siegel Markets Insider
  5. Jeremy Siegel says Treasurys crashed because everyone forgot they’re a bad inflation hedge while stocks ‘do be Business Insider India
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FTX was a boys’ club. When Caroline Ellison asked Sam Bankman-Fried for equity in the hedge fund she ran, he said ‘it was too complicated’ – Fortune

  1. FTX was a boys’ club. When Caroline Ellison asked Sam Bankman-Fried for equity in the hedge fund she ran, he said ‘it was too complicated’ Fortune
  2. ‘Don’t Do That Again’: Sam Bankman-Fried’s Lawyers Under Fire From Judge The New York Times
  3. SBF’s ex-girlfriend: He ‘directed me’ to steal billions from FTX Yahoo Finance
  4. Editorial: In the world of cryptocurrencies, Sam Bankman-Fried’s trial is a total nightmare Chicago Tribune
  5. Caroline Ellison testifies Sam Bankman-Fried directed her to commit crimes: CNBC Crypto World CNBC Television

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Hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman ‘absolutely’ would consider Elon Musk’s X for his new investment vehicle – Fortune

  1. Hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman ‘absolutely’ would consider Elon Musk’s X for his new investment vehicle Fortune
  2. Bill Ackman Tweets a Lot of Big Ideas. His Biggest Might Be Combining With Twitter Itself. – WSJ The Wall Street Journal
  3. Bill Ackman reportedly said he would ‘absolutely’ do a deal with X with his new SPARC funding vehicle CNBC
  4. Billionaire investor Bill Ackman would consider deal with Elon Musk’s X: report New York Post
  5. Bill Ackman would ‘absolutely’ consider SPARC deal with Elon Musk’s X: report MarketWatch
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Millionaire hedge fund CEO says he mainly hires people with no background in finance and once hiked a worker’s pay so he could call him at 1 a.m. – Yahoo Finance

  1. Millionaire hedge fund CEO says he mainly hires people with no background in finance and once hiked a worker’s pay so he could call him at 1 a.m. Yahoo Finance
  2. Hedge fund titan Peter Brown has slept in his office 2,000 times—and offered an employee a pay rise for answering the phone in the middle of the night Fortune
  3. CEO of secretive hedge fund Renaissance Technologies says he has spent 2,000 nights sleeping in office in rare interview MarketWatch
  4. CEO spends 2000 nights in the office news.com.au
  5. Hedge fund CEO hires staff with no finance experience, offered pay rise at 1 a.m. Business Insider
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Blackrock Seeks to Democratize Crypto — CEO Says Bitcoin Can Hedge Against Inflation, Currency Devaluation – Bitcoin News – Bitcoin News

  1. Blackrock Seeks to Democratize Crypto — CEO Says Bitcoin Can Hedge Against Inflation, Currency Devaluation – Bitcoin News Bitcoin News
  2. Institutions are turning pro-crypto because of demand, not because they believe in it Blockworks
  3. Thank BlackRock’s Clients for Larry Fink’s Change of Heart CoinDesk
  4. BlackRock CEO Larry Fink Calls BTC Digital Gold, Says Spot Bitcoin ETF Will Democratize Crypto Investments The Daily Hodl
  5. Bitcoin is the ‘apex digital asset’ that’s here to stay: Natalie Brunell Fox Business
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Tiger Cub hedge fund Coatue drastically increases Big Tech holdings, doubles down on chip stocks – CNBC

  1. Tiger Cub hedge fund Coatue drastically increases Big Tech holdings, doubles down on chip stocks CNBC
  2. Hedge Fund Coatue Management Doubles Down On Meta, Nvidia, And Microsoft As Tech Stocks Regain Momentum – Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX), Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META), NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA), Adobe (NASDAQ:ADBE), Benzinga
  3. Arrowstreet, Coatue Management among big hedge funds buying Meta in first quarter Yahoo Finance
  4. Loop Capital says Meta’s revenue outlook is getting brighter, sees more than 35% upside for tech giant CNBC
  5. Why Artificial Intelligence (AI) Pushed Meta Platforms Stock Higher Today The Motley Fool
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‘Game of Thrones’ Spinoff ‘The Hedge Knight’ Writers Room Pauses as George R.R. Martin Offers ‘Unequivocal Support’ of WGA – Variety

  1. ‘Game of Thrones’ Spinoff ‘The Hedge Knight’ Writers Room Pauses as George R.R. Martin Offers ‘Unequivocal Support’ of WGA Variety
  2. ‘Game Of Thrones’ Spinoff ‘A Knight Of The Seven Kingdoms: The Hedge Knight’ Shuts Down Writers Room For Duration Of Strike, Says George R.R. Martin Deadline
  3. ‘Game of Thrones’ Spin-Off Writers Room Shuts Down for Strike, George R.R. Martin Explains Why ‘House of the Dragon’ Season 2 Is Unaffected TheWrap
  4. ‘Game of Thrones’ spin-off ‘The Hedge Knight’ stalls amid writers’ strike Entertainment Weekly News
  5. George R.R. Martin Supports Strike, Game of Thrones Spinoff Pauses IndieWire
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Cryptoverse: Bitcoin is back with a bonk

Jan 17 (Reuters) – Bitcoin is on the charge in 2023, dragging the crypto market off the floor and electrifying bonk, a new meme coin.

The No.1 cryptocurrency has clocked a 26% gain in January, leaping 22% in the past week alone, breaking back above the $20,000 level and putting in on course for its best month since October 2021 – just before the Big Crypto Crash.

Ether has also risen, by 29% this year, helping drive the value of the overall global cryptocurrency market above $1 trillion, according to CoinGecko.

“After a rough year last year for cryptos, we are seeing a form of mean reversion,” said Jake Gordon, analyst at Bespoke Investment Group, referring to the theory of asset prices returning to long-term averages.

Researchers said investor bets on a rosier macroeconomic picture were driving a jump in riskier assets across the board.

Few crypto tokens have benefited more than bonk, which was launched at the end of December on the Solana blockchain and had rocketed 5,000% by early January. It has since fallen back, though remains up 910% since the start of the year.

It is the latest entrant to the hyper-volatile world of meme coins, cryptocurrencies inspired by online memes and jokes, and is modeled after the same grinning Shiba Inu dog as dogecoin – which itself was catapulted to fame by Elon Musk tweets.

Bonk’s a puppy, though.

Even at its peak it was worth just $0.000004873759 with a market capitalization of about $205 million.

Other meme tokens are also up, with dogecoin and Shiba Inu up 19% and 27% respectively in 2023.

But buyers beware.

“Investors need to be especially cautious when it comes to coins like doge, Shiba Inu and bonk,” said Les Borsai, co-founder of digital assets services firm Wave Financial.

“They fall just as hard as they surge.”

Nonetheless, some market players pointed to the relative cheapness of these tokens – doge is worth about eight cents – as a reason why speculators were willing to place bets on them.

“Meme coins belong to crypto, it’s part of the culture,” said Martin Leinweber, digital assets product specialist at MarketVector Indexes. “It just takes a few lines of codes to create a meme token and if you have a community for it, people love that.”

RUMORS OF SOL’S DEATH EXAGGERATED

Bonk is a meme coin with a mission. It was created, in part, to support the Solana blockchain, which has seen an exodus of funds and users since crypto exchange FTX filed for bankruptcy in November, and its native Solana token drop over 37%.

The Solana token has now indeed jumped as bonk has gained traction: it’s up 131% in 2023, the biggest gainer among major cryptocurrencies.

“Rumors of Solana’s death seem to have been greatly exaggerated,” said Tom Dunleavy, senior research analyst at data firm Messari. “Despite the recent price appreciation seemingly being driven by speculation, the underlying ecosystem remains quite strong.”

Reuters Graphics

TOO EARLY TO CALL A CRYPTO REVERSAL

Some researchers chalked the crypto gains up to optimism that inflation had peaked, reducing the need for tighter central bank policy.

“Bitcoin and crypto tend to front-run everything, which is why we’ve seen notable relative strength in this asset class of late,” said Wave Financial’s Borsai.

There’s certainly been an increase in activity.

The dollar value of bitcoin trading volumes on major exchanges over a 7-day period jumped to $151 million, the highest in nearly two months, according to data from Blockchain.com.

Total bitcoin flows – representing all uses including trading and payments – have increased by 13,130 bitcoin on average in the last 7 days, the largest rise in 64 days, Chainalysis data showed.

However, market watchers warned against celebrating too soon, noting trading volumes remained low and the macroeconomic environment uncertain.

“It’s too early to declare a definitive reversal for the crypto market despite the recent strength we’ve seen of late,” said Aaron Kaplan, co-founder of Prometheum, a digital asset securities trading platform.

“If interest rate increases are below what the market expects, then risk assets will benefit and crypto prices will likely continue the uptrend, but there’s just too much uncertainty right now.”

Reporting by Medha Singh and Lisa Mattackal in Bengaluru; Editing by Pravin Char

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.

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Sam Bankman-Fried borrowed $546 million from his hedge fund to buy a Robinhood stake


New Yokr
CNN
 — 

When Sam Bankman-Fried bought a nearly 7.6% stake in Robinhood, the popular stock-trading app, earlier this year, he financed the deal with more than half a billion dollars borrowed from his own hedge fund — the entity that prosecutors say was illegally funneling customer funds from its affiliated platform, FTX.

In an affidavit that emerged Tuesday, Bankman-Fried said he and FTX co-founder Gary Wang borrowed more than $546 million from the hedge fund, Alameda Research, which they used to purchase the Robinhood shares via a holding company primarily controlled by Bankman-Fried.

Wang has since pleaded guilty to four counts of fraud and conspiracy, in cooperation with US prosecutors investigating FTX’s collapse. Bankman-Fried has been indicted on eight criminal counts.

Since stepping down from FTX, he has repeatedly denied knowingly committing fraud; his arraignment date hasn’t been set. He was arrested earlier this month in the Bahamas, where FTX was based, and extradited to the US last week. He is under house arrest at his parents’ home in California, and scheduled to enter a plea in a federal court in Manhattan on January 3. He could face life in prison if found guilty.

Bankman-Fried’s stake in Robinhood is now at the center of a separate, multinational legal battle over the assets associated with FTX’s bankrupt crypto empire.

Four separate entities have laid claim to the approximately 56 million shares, worth about $450 million. FTX’s new management, which is trying to claw back funds for investors and customers of the bankrupt platform, want to wrest control of the shares from the Antigua-based holding company 90% owned by Bankman-Fried.

Bankman-Fried himself claims ownership of the shares, seeking a source of payment for legal expenses, according to FTX. Also claiming the Robinhood shares are bankrupt crypto lender BlockFi, and an individual FTX creditor.

Because the competing claims, FTX filed a motion earlier this month to the Delaware bankruptcy court to keep the assets frozen until the court “can resolve the issues in a manner that is fair to all creditors of the Debtors.”

It’s not clear from the court filings whether the $546 million used to purchase the stake included funds that prosecutors allege were stolen from customer deposits in FTX.

BlockFi, a prominent crypto lender, halted withdrawals as FTX came unraveled, citing significant exposure to the trading platform. It filed for bankruptcy on November 28, just over two weeks after FTX, Alameda and dozens of affiliates went under.

BlockFi is suing Bankman-Fried for the Robinhood shares, which BlockFi claims it is owed after Alameda defaulted on $680 million in collateralized loan obligations.

Earlier this month, Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev told CNBC that he’s “not surprised” the stake is one of the more valuable assets on FTX’s books because it is a public company’s stock.

“We don’t have a lot of information that you guys don’t have. We’re just watching this unfold and … it’s going to be locked up in bankruptcy proceedings, most likely for some time.”

Meanwhile, the recent implosion of cryptocurrencies has been disastrous for Robinhood. The company laid off 23% of its staff in August after cutting 9% of its employees in April. The online brokerage’s stock has been in freefall as trading has dried up.

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Macro hedge funds toast blowout year that peers are keen to forget

Hedge funds trading bonds and currencies are on track for their best year since the global financial crisis, boosted by the steep interest rate rises that have inflicted heavy losses on equity specialists and mainstream investors.

So-called macro hedge funds, made famous by the likes of George Soros and Louis Bacon, endured a barren period when markets were becalmed by trillions of dollars of central bank bond buying after 2008. But this year they have thrived thanks to seismic moves in global bond markets and a bull run in the dollar as the US Federal Reserve and other central banks battle soaring inflation.

Among the winners have been billionaire trader Chris Rokos, who recovered from losses last year to gain 45.5 per cent in 2022, helped by bets on rising interest rates, including during the UK’s market turmoil in the autumn. It leaves the Brevan Howard co-founder on track for his best year since launching his own fund, now one of the world’s biggest macro funds with about $15.5bn in assets, in 2015.

Caxton Associates chief executive Andrew Law gained 30.2 per cent to mid-December in his $4.3bn Macro fund, which is shut to new money, according to an investor. Said Haidar’s New York-based Haidar Capital has gained 194 per cent in its Jupiter fund, helped by bets on bonds and commodities, having at one stage this year been up more than 270 per cent.

“It reminds me of the early part of my career when macro funds were the dominant style of investing,” said Kenneth Tropin, chair of $19bn-in-assets Graham Capital, which he founded in 1994, referring to strong periods for macro traders in the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s.

“They were truly hedge funds that intentionally were not correlated to people’s underlying exposure in stocks and bonds,” added Tropin.

Global stocks have dropped 20 per cent this year, while bonds have delivered their biggest declines in decades, making 2022 a year to forget for most asset managers. But hedge funds that can bet against bonds or treat currencies as an asset class have leapt ahead. Macro funds on average gained 8.2 per cent in the first 11 months of this year, according to data group HFR. That puts them on track for their best year since 2007, during the onset of the global financial crisis.

Traders profited from bets on rising yields, such as in US two-year debt, whose yield has soared from 0.7 per cent to 4.3 per cent, and the 10-year gilt, which has risen from 1 per cent to 3.6 per cent. A surprise change by the Bank of Japan to its yield curve control policy, which sent Japanese government bond yields soaring, delivered a further boost to returns.

“They have given every macro trader a lovely Christmas — even the office security guards are short Japanese government bonds I think,” quipped one macro hedge fund manager.

With the “artificial suppression of volatility” from ultra-loose monetary policy now gone, macro traders were likely to continue to profit from their economic research, said Darren Wolf, global head of investments, alternatives at Abrdn.

Computer-driven hedge funds have also benefited, with many of the market moves providing long-lasting trends. These so-called managed futures funds are up 12.6 per cent, their best year of returns since 2008.

London-based Aspect Capital, which manages about $10bn in assets, gained 39.7 per cent in its flagship Diversified fund. It profited in markets including bonds, energy and commodities, with its biggest single win coming from bets against UK gilts. Leda Braga’s Systematica gained 27 per cent in its BlueTrend fund.

“We’re in a new era where the unexpected keeps happening with alarming regularity,” said Andrew Beer, managing member at US investment firm Dynamic Beta. Jumping yields and fast-moving currencies presented opportunities for trend-following funds, he added.

The gains stand in sharp contrast to the performance of equity hedge funds, many of which have endured a miserable year as the high-growth but unprofitable technology stocks that climbed in the bull market were sent plummeting by rising interest rates.

Chase Coleman’s Tiger Global, one of the biggest winners from soaring tech stocks at the height of the coronavirus pandemic, lost 54 per cent this year. Andreas Halvorsen’s Viking, which moved out of stocks trading on very high multiples early this year, lost 3.3 per cent up to mid-December.

Meanwhile, Boston-based Whale Rock, a tech-focused fund, lost 42.7 per cent. And Skye Global, set up by former Third Point analyst Jamie Sterne, lost 40.9 per cent, hit by losses on stocks such as Amazon, Microsoft and Alphabet. Sterne wrote in an investor letter seen by the Financial Times that he had been wrong about the “severity of the macro risks”.

Equity funds overall are down 9.7 per cent, putting them on track for their worst year of returns since the financial crisis of 2008, according to HFR.

“Our largest disappointment came from those managers, even well-known ones with long track records, who failed to anticipate the impact of rising rates on growth stocks,” said Cédric Vuignier, head of liquid alternative managed funds and research at SYZ Capital. “They didn’t recognise the paradigm shift and buried their heads in the sand.”

With the exception of 2020, this year has marked the biggest gap between the top and bottom deciles of hedge fund performance since the aftermath of the financial crisis in 2009, according to HFR.

“Over the last 10 years, people were rewarded for investing in hedge fund strategies correlated with [market returns],” said Graham Capital’s Tropin. “However, 2022 was the year to remind you that a hedge fund should ideally give you diversity as well.”

Additional reporting by Katie Martin

laurence.fletcher@ft.com

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