Hedge funds nurse losses on bets against Greek, Italian
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[June 15, 2020] By
Maiya Keidan
LONDON (Reuters) - Some hedge funds that
bet against a series of Greek and Italian companies are nursing losses
after the European Union's breakthrough plan for a 750 billion euro
recovery fund sent stock markets surging across southern Europe.
The funds, which include Citadel, Marshall Wace and AKO Capital, still
hold short positions on companies such as Italy's Banco BPM <BAMI.MI>
and Greece's Piraeus Bank ahead of a June 18-19 EU summit to debate the
recovery fund, aimed at helping European economies recover from the
impact of the coronavirus pandemic.
Essentially a bet that the price will fall, shorting involves borrowing
shares then selling them in expectation of being able to buy them back
cheaper and pocket the difference.
Early last month, shorting Italian and Greek shares may have seemed like
a no-brainer; heavily dependent on tourism, their economies are expected
to contract 9-13% this year. Italy has also witnessed 34,000 coronavirus
deaths.
But the May 18 Franco-German proposal for the recovery fund upended
those bets, lifting stock markets across southern Europe. The moves
accelerated after the European Central Bank upped the size of its
emergency stimulus programme on June 4.
(GRAPHIC - Greek and Italian shares have rallied sharply since May 18:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/dgkplwyryvb/shorts.PNG)
Shares in Banco BPM have climbed 10.8% since May 18, while Monte Dei
Paschi di Siena <BMPS.MI> is up 25.7%.
Many stocks were off limits to hedge funds before May 18, however, when
six European states, including Italy and Greece, scrapped short-selling
bans introduced in March.
"Greece and Italy are the main beneficiaries of (the) EU bond and ECB
quantitative easing," said Louis Gargour, chief investment officer at
hedge fund LNG Capital, who was not betting against the two countries.
"The expression 'Don't fight the Fed' can also be extended to 'Don't
fight the ECB'."
Filings with regulators show Marshall Wace and Citadel had each taken
out five short bets in Italy; aside from the banks, targets include oil
and gas contractor Saipem <SPMI.MI> and Italian luxury leather goods
company Salvatore Ferragamo <SFER.MI>. All have so far worked against
the funds.
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The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock
exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, June 11, 2020. REUTERS/Staff
Hedge funds had 20 outstanding shorts in Italian companies and seven short
positions in Greek companies, filings show.
Those trades could still work, say, if the proposal fails to meet approval from
the EU, or if markets are hit by another wave of COVID-19 infections that force
economies to lock down again.
"In case of a new coronavirus crisis, economies of Italy, Spain and Greece will
be the hardest hit and we will probably be targeted as new markets for shorts,"
said Luca Rubini, managing director at investment firm Fidentiis in Milan.
European short-selling laws require only bets of 0.5% and above of the total
number of shares to be disclosed. It is also unclear if all the hedge funds have
offset those trades with long positions.
A spokeswoman for Marshall Wace said the investor was currently net long on
Italian and Eurozone banks, net long Italy and had a small net long position in
Greece.
London-based Oceanwood Capital Management declared a short position of 0.6% of
shares in Greek lender Piraeus Bank <BOPr.AT> on May 21.
Lansdowne, which has a bet of 2.8% against Piraeus Bank, last month took out
bets of 0.9% against Greece's Eurobank Ergasias <EURBr.AT>, 1% of Alpha Bank <ACBr.AT>
and 1.7% of Public Power Corporation <DEHr.AT>.
Shares in Piraeus, Eurobank Ergasias and Public Power have rallied between 30%
and 40% between May 14 and June 12 while Alpha Bank rose 17.7%.
Oceanwood, Lansdowne, AKO Capital and Citadel all declined to comment.
(Reporting by Maiya Keidan, additional reporting by Abhinav Ramnarayan and
Stefano Rebaudo; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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