From a notoriously- unreliable source but the news is significant enough to take note and look for confirmation.
Soros shorting the S&P 500, dumping 37% of his stock portfolio, buying gold...
18
May, 2016
Soros
Fund Management, the asset management company founded by
billionaire George
Soros, has doubled its
put on the S&P
500 stock index,
according to its filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The
hedge fund said Monday it owned a put
option of
2.1 million shares on the SPDR S&P 500 exchange-traded fund
(ETF), which tracks the benchmark U.S. index, in the first quarter of
2016. Put options entitle the holder to sell an asset at a particular
price. In the fourth quarter of 2015, Soros had a 1 million share put
option on the ETF.
Popow
| ullstein bild | Getty Images Billionaire
investor George Soros.
The
S&P 500 index rallied sharply from the middle of February but has
pared some gains this month.
Put
options can be a bearish bet that an asset is going to decline.
However, they can also be a hedge for a separate long position —
when a fund has a separate option on which it will profit if the
price of the security rises.
Securities
filings do not require a fund to disclose all of its positions. As
such, they offer a snapshot rather than a deep insight into hedge
funds' investment strategies.
Mixed signals
The
filing came amid mixed signals about the health of the U.S. and
global economy. U.S. economic expansion slowed to 0.5 percent
annualized in the first quarter from 1.4 percent in the fourth and
the much-eyed nonfarm payrolls report in April showed disappointing
levels of job creation.
Economic
data from China, the world's second-biggest economy, has continued to
disappoint as well. Industrial production, retail sales and
investment data came in below expectations over the weekend, despite
official stimulus measures.
Last
month, Soros warned that China's debt-fueled growth bore an "eerie
resemblance," to the conditions that led to the 2008
financial crisis.
Demand
for gold and
other precious metals are closely tied to the health of Asian
economies, which are big markets for bullion. Gold was traditionally
viewed as a "safe haven" bet in times of market
uncertainty, akin to U.S.
Treasurys or German
Bunds.
The
Soros fund, which is currently structured as a privately owned family
office, bought 19.4 million shares in Barrick
Gold in
the first quarter, having previously dissolved its stake in the
world's top gold mining company by production in the third quarter of
2015.
Symbol
|
Price
|
Change
|
%Change
|
Volume
|
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1272.50
|
-4.40
|
-0.34%
|
52278
|
||
17.03
|
-0.22
|
-1.28%
|
17044
|
||
2.0595
|
-0.0295
|
-1.41%
|
26020
|
||
1042.70
|
-11.80
|
-1.12%
|
2366
|
The
asset management company also took out a new 1 million share stake in
the first quarter inSilver
Wheaton,
which claims to be the world's largest precious metals streaming
company.
The
Soros fund also took out a 1.1 million share call
option on
the SPDR
Gold Trust,
the largest ETF tracking physical bullion. Call options entitle the
bearer to buy an asset at a specified price.
Other
top hedge funds acted differently. Paulson & Co, led by John
Paulson,
slashed its investment in SPDR Gold Trust last quarter, according to
its filing to the SEC on Monday. Last quarter it held 4.8 million
shares in the ETF, down from 5.8 million shares in the last three
months of 2015.
Tech stocks
Soros
Fund Management also cut its stakes in some of the world's biggest
technology stocks.
It
cuts its class-A shares of Alphabet,
the parent company of Google, to 6,637 in the first quarter from
65,570 in the fourth quarter of 2015. Plus, it roughly halved it
holding of Facebook shares to 442,696 from 816,761.
Warren
Buffett's Berkshire
Hathaway brought 9.8
million shares in Apple last
quarter, the company's regulatory filing showed on Monday.
Thanks for your comments. I've got no energy for setting up any new blogs but there are tags at the bottom of the article, eg. Dying Earth that you can press on to get previous articles on the same theme. Best ?I can do
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