Hedge fund manager warns of looming market bubble

Scientific Playa

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Klarman warns of looming market bubble
says investors are underplaying risk



Klarman warns of impending asset price bubble
By Miles Johnson, Hedge Fund Correspondent

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Seth Klarman, head of Baupost Group

One of the world’s most respected investors has raised the alarm over a looming asset price bubble, calling out “nosebleed valuations” in technology shares like Netflix and Tesla Motors and warning of the potential for a brutal correction across financial markets.

Seth Klarman, the publicity shy head of the $27bn Baupost Group whose investment opinions have attracted a near cult-like following, said that investors were underplaying risk and were not prepared for an end to central banks reversing a five-year experiment in ultra-loose money.

While noting that he could not predict exactly when a significant market correction would occur, Mr Klarman wrote in a private letter to clients: “When the markets reverse, everything investors thought they knew will be turned upside down and inside out. ‘Buy the dips’ will be replaced with ‘what was I thinking?’ . . .  Anyone who is poorly positioned and ill-prepared will find there’s a long way to fall. Few, if any, will escape unscathed.

Baupost, which is closed to new investment, returned $4bn to clients last year.

The warning by Mr Klarman, who has won a devoted audience for his highly cautious, value-driven approach, and whose out-of-print book on investment sells second-hand for as much as $2,900 on Amazon, comes after US shares surged by almost a third last year. Many well known technology companies, such as Facebook, more than doubled.

“Any year in which the S&P 500 jumps 32 per cent and the Nasdaq 40 per cent while corporate earnings barely increase should be a cause for concern, not for further exuberance,” Mr Klarman wrote.

“On almost any metric, the US equity market is historically quite expensive. A skeptic would have to be blind not to see bubbles inflating in junk bond issuance, credit quality, and yields, not to mention the nosebleed stock market valuations of fashionable companies like Netflix and Tesla Motors,” he wrote. The Baupost Group declined to comment.

Since central banks slashed interest rates to record lows and began a policy of buying up government bonds after the 2008 market crash, the S&P 500 has rallied by more than 150 per cent to new all-time highs. Bond yields have fallen sharply and many other assets, from fine art to property in Singapore and London, have leapt in value.

Mr Klarman is exceptional among hedge fund managers for often holding the bulk of his portfolio in cash, yet still generating annualised returns of 18 per cent since 1983 using often highly concentrated investments.

The Boston-based investor was recently ranked as the fourth best performing hedge fund manager of all time for generating $21.5bn in returns over its history, coming behind George Soros, Ray Dalio and John Paulson.
 

Scientific Playa

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World Stocks Tumble On Weak China, Japan Data
by The Associated Press


March 10, 2014 5:37 AM

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Asian stock markets sank Monday, battered by weak Chinese trade and a reduced estimate for Japan's economic growth. European markets were mostly higher.


Shares in Malaysia Airlines tumbled on news of the weekend disappearance of one its jets en route to Beijing.


Japan's Nikkei 225 closed down 1 percent at 15,120.14 and China's Shanghai Composite plunged 2.9 percent to 1,999.06. Hong Kong's Hang Seng dropped 1.8 percent to 22,264.93.


Markets were also down in Australia, Taiwan, South Korea and Southeast Asia.


Data released on the weekend showed China's exports fell by an unexpectedly large 18 percent in February, possibly denting hopes trade will help drive the slowing economy while communist leaders push ambitious reforms.


China's official 2014 economic growth target of 7.5 percent, announced last week by Premier Li Keqiang, assumes trade also will grow by 7.5 percent. But customs data show combined imports and exports so far this year have shrunk by 4.8 percent.


Meanwhile, Japan reported Monday a record current account deficit for January, and lowered its economic growth estimate for the October-December quarter to 0.7 percent from 1 percent.


Andrew Sullivan of Kim Eng Securities in Hong Kong said sentiment was affected by the weak data from China and from Japan.


However, "there are technical factors behind the China data which means it is not as bad as the first look suggests," he said in a market commentary.


Some analysts say exports in February last year might have been overstated by exporters inflating sales figures to evade currency controls and bring extra money into China.


In early European trading, Britain's FTSE 100 rose 0.4 percent to 6,738.95. France's CAC-40 gained 1.1 percent to 4,415.79 and Germany's DAX added 0.2 percent to 9,373.67.


Futures augured subdued trading on Wall Street. Dow Jones futures and S&P 500 futures were both little changed.


Shares of Malaysian Airlines System Bhd., the holding company of Malaysia Airlines, were down 4 percent on the Kuala Lumpur stock market, tempering a 10 percent fall in early trading.


One of its Boeing 777 jets went missing early Saturday morning on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people on board. Search and rescue efforts in the South China Sea have not yet identified any debris.


Shares of other Asian airlines also fell. Cathay Pacific shed 0.4 percent and Qantas Airways lost 1.8 percent.


In the oil market, benchmark U.S. crude for April delivery was down $1.21 at $101.37 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose $1.02 on Friday to settle at $102.58.


In currencies, the euro rose to $1.3894 from its previous close of $1.3875. The dollar rose to 103.34 yen from 103.16 yen.
 

zerozero

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He should be hedging against it then :obama: what's his reason for telling us? :skepticalbreh:

(Okay I can kinda guess why... people just like to talk about things)
 

Scientific Playa

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Global Economic RESET Caused by Derivatives!!! Lindsey Williams Warned Us Long Ago!!!
March 10th, 2014

http://investmentwatchblog.com/glob...liams-warned-us-long-ago/#g1l01gJsSYGePdJX.99



Global Debt Exceeds $100 Trillion as Governments Binge, BIS Says
The $30 trillion increase from $70 trillion between mid-2007 and mid-2013
Austerity Measures
Big Banks and Derivatives: Why Another Financial Crisis Is Inevitable

Sources:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-03…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzef4…
http://databank.worldbank.org/data/do…
http://www.forbes.com/sites/stevedenn…





 

stealthbomber

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The last recession was barely a blip on the radar. Alot of fearmongering going on.

you have no idea what you're talking about

we were so close to a world altering collapse, if they hadn't have bailed out the banks our way of life would have changed for sure

i wish they would have let them fail

they want capitalism without the risk of failure, too big to fail my ass, you break the law and send the world into a depression you suffer the consequences

we would have come out stronger..
 

L&HH

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you have no idea what you're talking about

we were so close to a world altering collapse, if they hadn't have bailed out the banks our way of life would have changed for sure

i wish they would have let them fail

they want capitalism without the risk of failure, too big to fail my ass, you break the law and send the world into a depression you suffer the consequences

we would have come out stronger..

that's the way it's supposed to work. From what I've read, they didn't fix anything, just put in place a temporary stop-gap. But when shyt really hits the fan, brace yourselves :merchant:.

That's why I live by the motto of Goodz:

Hoes buy me clothes, all money goes to guns and bullets
 

stealthbomber

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that's the way it's supposed to work. From what I've read, they didn't fix anything, just put in place a temporary stop-gap. But when shyt really hits the fan, brace yourselves :merchant:.

That's why I live by the motto of Goodz:

Hoes buy me clothes, all money goes to guns and bullets

whether its this coming bubble the next one or whatever things WILL change

our economic and political system is so fundamentally flawed, it can't sustain itself for much longer..

i fully expect to be a generation that lives through a major depression and complete change of our way of life

but honestly im excited, i think humanity is going to take a turn for the better

if we make it outta this the world will be a better place





fukk i feel like art barr right now :russ:
 

Leasy

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whether its this coming bubble the next one or whatever things WILL change

our economic and political system is so fundamentally flawed, it can't sustain itself for much longer..

i fully expect to be a generation that lives through a major depression and complete change of our way of life

but honestly im excited, i think humanity is going to take a turn for the better

if we make it outta this the world will be a better place





fukk i feel like art barr right now :russ:

Get that depressing shyt out of here breh :camby:
 
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