Hedge funds have stocks to dump, in bad sign for sell-off

Hedge funds have stocks to dump, in bad sign for sell-off

Hedge funds had just begun warming to stocks again, as they fought to boost performance in what has been the industry’s worst year since 2011.

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York. (Bloomberg pic)
TOKYO:
There’s probably room for more capitulation when it comes to US stocks.

Hedge funds that had stocked up on American equities are still sitting on substantial inventory, according to Sundial Capital Research Inc.

While exposure to the S&P 500 Index among long-short equity funds has come down significantly from the record high of early October, it’s still well above levels that marked other market lows over the past decade, Sundial President Jason Goepfert wrote in a note to clients Friday.

“Hedge funds are fleeing stocks, but not fast enough,” he said. “Their returns are still showing consistently positive correlations to movements in the S&P 500, suggesting they haven’t reduced their exposure much despite the volatility.”

US stock benchmarks have fallen back into a correction this month as the bond market flagged increasing concerns with the outlook for growth and US-China trade tensions remained despite a summit of the two nations’ leaders. The S&P 500 Index has fallen more than 10% from its September high.

Hedge funds had just begun warming to stocks again, as they fought to boost performance in what has been the industry’s worst year since 2011.

Gross leverage, a measure of risk appetite, had rebounded by the end of last month from a one-year low, client data compiled by Goldman Sachs showed.

JPMorgan Chase & Co’s hedge-fund clients had been raising their equity exposure at one of the fastest rates this year.

While bulls including Marko Kolanovic, a strategist at JPMorgan, have cited low hedge-fund equity exposure as a potential catalyst for a year-end rally, Sundial’s Goepfert isn’t alone in pointing to their positioning as a concern for stocks.

Biased news is depressing stocks, Kolanovic says – read more here.

Renaissance Macro Research’s Jeff deGraaf has said hedge-fund buying can be framed as a sign that investor capitulation – a condition that usually sets the stage for a sustained recovery – is yet to occur.

Sundial sees more selling ahead.

“Near other good lows over the past decade, exposure has dropped to 30% or less, and we have a long way to go there,” Goepfert wrote. “It would be best for bulls if that happened sooner rather than later.”

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