Hedge funds bet on recovery in 2021
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[January 04, 2021] By
Maiya Keidan and Rod Nickel
TORONTO (Reuters) - Some global hedge fund
investors are going into 2021 optimistic about a speedy snap-back from
the economic challenges related to the coronavirus pandemic.
Hedge funds, which use leverage and employ more aggressive, often
riskier strategies than other investors, believe many previously
undesirable sectors, ranging from energy to retail, will rebound in
2021.
Accounting for roughly $3 trillion in assets, hedge funds showed
resilience in 2020, with many outperforming the market, according to
investors.
"We think 2021 is going to be a really positive year for the markets,"
said Jason Donville, president and CEO at Toronto-based hedge fund
Donville Kent Asset Management. He forecasts an explosion of pent-up
demand for travel and leisure producing a period of "super growth."
"I think it will take a little while for the vaccines to roll out and
then somewhere around March, April, May, you're going to get a
confluence of the vaccines getting to a certain critical mass... and
infection rates dropping."
For 2020 as a whole, the S&P 500 unofficially rose 16.26%, a stunning
rally from a bear market that kicked off when the pandemic spread
rapidly earlier in the year.
"What I would say about 2021 is it looks like it's going to be a year of
recovery," said Robert Sears, chief investment officer at UK-based
Capital Generation Partners, which invests in hedge funds globally.
"That's the consensus view."
The gainers in 2020 included the S&P 500 Information Technology Sector,
up more than 42% as the sector benefited from the abrupt acceleration of
online trends. On the other hand, the S&P 500 Hotels Restaurants and
Leisure eeked out a gain of 1.4%.In the past quarter, however, leisure
stocks have rebounded as vaccine rollouts have accelerated hopes of
recovery.
"I think macro conditions are going to continue to be quite volatile, so
macro should have a good year," said Sears, referring to funds that
invest according to macroeconomic trends.
He added that funds that specialize in currencies and commodities should
do well.
Jack McIntyre, a portfolio manager at $62 billion U.S. firm Brandywine
Global, which runs a macro hedge fund strategy, said there will be "less
uncertainty and more certainty" in the new year.
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George Washington is seen with a printed medical mask on a one
dollar bill reflected in a drop on a syringe needle in this
illustration taken November 9, 2020. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
Financials are a sector that has been challenged by coronavirus and could be
supported by a recovery, said Philippe Ferreira at Paris-based fund of hedge
fund Lyxor Asset Management, adding that the sector typically performs better in
the initial stage of a recovery.
"Managers are easing the short bias toward financials because we are entering a
recovery," said Ferreira, whose firm invests in hedge funds globally.
The S&P Financial Index fell around 4.3% in 2020 despite rebounding in the
fourth quarter.
"On the macro side, managers say that with rates so low, they are diversifying
fixed income with inflation and especially on the U.S. side and gold," said
Ferreira.
North American energy is another beaten-down sector popular with hedge funds,
market participants said. The Canadian Energy Sector Index lost 37.8% over the
entirety of 2020 while a comparable index for the U.S. fell 37.3%.
"Anything in energy... all of that is a COVID recovery play to the extent the
demand for fuel goes up, people start going back to the office more," said one
Canadian hedge fund manager.
"We're adding the names like AltaGas, Pembina and Canadian Natural Resources and
we've been a buyer since post-the U.S. election."
AltaGas stock plummeted 60% in March and is down 5.1% for the year through Dec.
31. Shares in Pembina and Canadian Natural Gas fell 61.3% and 27.3%,
respectively, over 2020.
"I would say that energy consumption is going to make a very healthy recovery
and probably continue on an above-historical year-on-year level," said Jay
Tatum, portfolio manager at New York-based metals-focused Valent Asset
Management. He added that oil was only one source of energy that would see
growth.
(Reporting by Maiya Keidan and Rod Nickel; Editing by Megan Davies and Dan
Grebler)
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