Oh brother! Coronavirus calls split family fortunes on
Wall Street
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[April 17, 2020] By
Lawrence Delevingne
BOSTON (Reuters) - After a calamitous two
week plunge in stocks as the coronavirus spread globally, Ricky Sandler
called into a midday CNBC show on March 16 with a brash, bullish
prediction.
“People are totally missing what is happening here. Every new headline,
every new hysteria is making people more nervous and it's actually very,
very positive,” he said, recommending that viewers borrow against their
mortgages to buy stocks.
Andrew Sandler, holed up with family, dogs and pet fish on New York's
Long Island, couldn't resist a shot at his little brother on Facebook.
“I think he's wrong,” Andrew posted immediately after the TV appearance.
The depth and duration of COVID-19's economic impact is a subject of
debate among families the world over. But for Ricky and Andrew Sandler,
their diverging views have broader implications: both run multi-billion
dollar stock-focused hedge funds.
Their different outlooks -- time to buy or stay cautious -- have meant
double-digit losses for Ricky's $7.6 billion Eminence Capital LP and
double-digit gains for Andrew's nearly $2 billion unit of Sandler
Capital Management.
It's a scenario playing out across Wall Street. The coronavirus killed
off the longest-running bull market in equities, meaning most hedge
funds are nursing losses, with the average stock-focused fund down about
9.5% in March and 13% lower for the first quarter, according to data
tracker HFR.
A small number of hedge fund managers who positioned in time for the
fallout have profited, few more than Andrew Sandler. The elder Sandler
brother was one of the best performing hedge fund managers in the world
for the first quarter, according to a ranking by HSBC.
To be sure, when markets recover, investors who held or added to their
stock holdings may generate large gains, but the timing of such a payoff
is uncertain.
Representatives for Andrew and Ricky declined to comment and would not
make them available for interview.
DOWNSIDE RISKS
The Sandler brothers followed their late father, Harvey, into investment
management in the 1990s. Andrew joined the family firm while Ricky set
up his own fund. Until recently the brothers, now in their early 50s,
worked a few blocks apart in midtown Manhattan offices.
Ricky, a cycling enthusiast who alternates between athletic apparel and
power neckties, is comfortable in the spotlight. He routinely appears at
gatherings of Wall Street’s elite, such as the Milken Institute's annual
confab in Beverly Hills and Allen & Co's Sun Valley conference, and
sometimes mounts public campaigns against companies.
Self-described as risk averse, Andrew is more low-key, avoiding the
hedge fund speaking circuit in favor of tending to a 17,000 gallon
basement aquarium.
In contrast to his younger brother, Andrew's caution meant he missed out
on the full market surge of recent years. His Sandler Plus fund gained
just 2.75% in 2019, according to an investor letter, compared to a gain
of nearly 14% by the average stock focused fund.
That all changed this year. Andrew had positioned his funds defensively,
writing to investors on January 16 that “we remain concerned about
valuations and downside risks the market seems to be ignoring.”
Andrew was soon reducing market exposure even further, in part because
of a rapidly spreading virus in China.
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A combination photograph shows (L) an undated handout photo of
Andrew Sandler, managing director and head of hedge funds at Sandler
Capital Management, and a file image of Ricky Sandler, Founder, CEO
and Chief Investment Officer, Eminence Capital, speaking at the
Milken Institute's 21st Global Conference in Beverly Hills,
California, U.S. May 1, 2018. Sandler Capital Management/Handout via
REUTERS (L) and REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
“The Coronavirus could serve as a catalyst for disappointing global growth as
well as specifically disrupt certain supply chains and consumer businesses,” the
firm noted in a January 28 Lyxor/Sandler U.S. Equity Fund report.
Andrew's positioning was ideal when stocks started their rapid decline in late
February: his funds had more bets on stocks declining than on them rising that
month, according to a February 25 Lyxor report.
It also noted increased bets on healthcare stocks and a reduction in consumer
discretionary businesses, which have been particularly hard hit as governments
curtailed economic activity to prevent the spread of the virus.
Andrew's Sandler Plus funds surged approximately 9.5% in March, putting its
year-to-date performance at nearly 15%, according to an investor update reviewed
by Reuters.
'TAKE HEED'
On March 16, the same day that Ricky took to CNBC to talk up the markets, Andrew
warned a friend that he was not surprised by 1,000 point single day declines for
major stock indexes. "Going to be more. Stay liquid my man. This is fucked up,"
he wrote on Facebook.
Ricky came out of 2019 optimistic. As U.S. stocks surged, Eminence's main hedge
fund gained 21% in 2019 with a bullish net portfolio exposure of 47% in July,
according to Institutional Investor.
Eminence's exact positioning in late February was not available, but by the time
Ricky went on CNBC in mid-March, his fund had suffered losses of more than 30%,
according to an investor with direct knowledge of the performance.
Eminence's top holdings at yearend, according to the most recent regulatory
filing, included Versace apparel parent Capri Holdings Limited <CPRI.N>,
chemical maker Ashland Global Holdings Inc. <ASH.N> and motorsports giant
Liberty Media Formula One <FWONA.O>; those stocks suffered first quarter price
declines of between 35% and 72%.
Ricky told clients on a call in late March that he was leaning into his
positions and remained bullish on the portfolio, according to the investor.
Eminence performance rebounded slightly by the end of the month, putting the
fund down 19% for the first quarter, according to the investor.
Reuters could not determine if Eminence has changed its investment strategy
since the end of the first quarter; a representative for the firm declined to
comment on that or recent performance.
Ricky was still bullish and predicted a 10% stock market rise from current
levels by the yearend in an April 7 video discussion hosted by the University of
Wisconsin.
Major U.S stock indices have risen between 7% and 12% since the beginning of
April.
It's not clear how much the Sandler brothers discuss the markets. But on March
20, a long-dormant Twitter account under the name Ricky Sandler responded to
criticism of his CNBC appearance earlier in the week.
“Those who think I am an idiot take heed,” he wrote. “This is the buying
opportunity of a lifetime.”
(Reporting by Lawrence Delevingne. Editing by Carmel Crimmins)
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