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Strategies & Market Trends : Options -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: SecularBull who wrote (7646)5/6/2000 3:24:00 PM
From: Jill  Respond to of 8096
 
Hedge managers cautious, build cash
Here's some interesting bear sentiment--not that hedge funds should be our exemplars:

cbs.marketwatch.com

By Michael Molinski, CBS MarketWatch
Last Update: 7:42 PM ET May 5, 2000 Mutual Fund Center
Mutual Understanding

NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- Hedge fund managers sold technology and other growth stocks in April and cautiously built up cash positions, a sign that they expect further drops in the stock market over the next few months, a hedge fund tracking firm said Friday.

Hedge funds on average brought their "long" bets on the stock market to about 50 percent of holdings, down from 60 percent a month earlier, and put those extra 10 percentage points into cash as a safe holding, said Charles Gradante, chief investment officer at Hennessee Hedge Fund Advisory Group.

"Hedge funds are selling into the rallies and generating cash," Gradante told CBS.MarketWatch.com in an interview. "They expect the market correction to continue."

Gradante said it's the economy, and not the high valuations of tech stocks, that has hedge funds managers worried. Reports that showed first-quarter increases in labor costs, consumer spending, inventories and production, along with lower unemployment, have created an air of pessimism for the stock market, he said.

"We at Hennessee see three, maybe four more rate hikes amounting to 75 to 100 basis points this year, assuming inflation is contained," he said. "If the second quarter shows inflation, we could see 150 to 175 basis points in rate hikes."

"The market is interpreting the first-quarter (economic) numbers as being ho-hum, but hedge funds are interpreting them as being very negative," Gradante said. "Unless the second quarter shows dramatic reduction in consumer demand, hedge funds will continue generating cash and taking money out of the market."

Specifically, Gradante said hedge funds "picked up some bargains during the big drops on April 14 and 17. But since then they haven't been adding any new money. They bought companies like Brocade (BRCD: news, msgs), JDS Uniphase (JDSU: news, msgs), Broadcom (BRCM: news, msgs), Cisco (CSCO: news, msgs) and Intel (INTL: news, msgs) but have now been selling those companies on rallies because of the economic data."

Hennessee also defended hedge funds as a group, in the wake of the large losses suffered by the industry's two most notable personalities -- George Soros and Julian Robertson. Their demise doesn't point to a downfall in hedge funds but rather shows "that the macro strategy has gone from a market of fundamentals to a market of technicals," Hennessee said in a statement.

"Technical analysis of trends has been very successful for the last two years, despite the fact that they ignore fundamentals," the statement said, adding that the key problem with Soros' Quantum Fund and Robertson's Tiger Fund was that they both put too much weight on company fundamentals



To: SecularBull who wrote (7646)5/8/2000 6:40:00 AM
From: Jill  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 8096
 
Morning, Loffy. Thanx for your post. What did you think of the SDLI posts on the thread yesterday? If I remember, you "flushed" JDSU for SDLI. At this point I'm long JDSU at 55, but the June strikes on JDSU are also basically my only remaining open put positions. However I'm overexposed on them. The chart isn't thrilling

siliconinvestor.com

Tho it looks to be sort of stabilizing...