Some of the world’s top hedge fund managers scaled back their U.S. stock investments last quarter as markets tumbled.
The value of Stan Druckenmiller’s disclosed U.S. equity holdings dropped 41 percent to $868 million, according to a filing from the billionaire’s family office. The listed holdings at Louis Bacon’s Moore Capital Management fell 39 percent to $1.65 billion, while at David Tepper’s Appaloosa Management, they dropped 30 percent to $2.82 billion.
Some of the most closely watched money managers are retreating from U.S. stocks after the market has more than tripled from its 2008 low. Druckenmiller, who produced average annual returns of 30 percent from 1986 through 2010 at his Duquesne Capital Management, told an investor conference earlier this month that his outlook on equities could turn negative. Tepper, Appaloosa’s billionaire founder, said in September that he’s not as optimistic on the stock market as he could be because expectations for corporate earnings were high.
“I could see myself getting bearish, and I can’t see myself getting bullish,” Druckenmiller, a longtime hedge fund manager who worked for George Soros for more than a decade, said on Nov. 3 at the New York Times DealBook conference.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index is little changed in 2015 after slumping 6.9 percent during the third quarter as investors reacted to signs of a slowdown in China.
Earnings Multiples
Druckenmiller’s Duquesne Family Office sold out of 18 equity positions in the third quarter, led by a $324 million stake in an exchange-traded fund that tracks gold prices, and reported seven new positions. Moore divested 187 investments, such as Chinese search engine Baidu Inc., while adding 81 new stakes. Appaloosa got out of seven stocks, including Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., and reported five new holdings.
“I’m not as bullish as I could be because I have problems with earnings growth, problems with multiples,” Tepper told CNBC in the September interview, referring to price-to-earnings ratios. “I can’t really call myself a bull.”
Zach Schreiber, who had worked for Druckenmiller before running PointState Capital, sold out of 69 equity positions in the third quarter including energy companies TransCanada Corp. and Whiting Petroleum Corp., and added 18 new stakes, according to a filing. The value of PointState’s U.S. stock holdings fell by more than half to $3.2 billion.
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