Gabe Plotkin, widely regarded as one of the industry's best
traders after posting years of double digit returns, told
investors that the last 17 months have been "an incredibly
trying time."
Plotkin had been trying to turn around the firm after being
caught out in early 2021 betting against retail favorite
GameStop and after being wrong footed again by tumbling markets
this year.
"The appropriate next step is to wind down the Funds by fully
liquidating the Funds' assets and accounts and returning cash to
all investors," Plotkin wrote in a letter reviewed by Reuters on
Wednesday.
Melvin Capital had $7.8 billion in assets at the end of April.
The fund lost 23% in the first four months of 2022, a person
familiar with the fund's finances said.
This year's losses come on the heels of steep losses in 2021
when Melvin Capital ended the year down 39%. The firm bet that
shares of GameStop would tumble but was battered when retail
investors took the other side and sent the stock surging.
The firm had $12.5 billion in assets at the start of 2021.
In the letter Plotkin said he had already raised a substantial
amount of cash and cut the funds' exposure.
A spokesman for Plotkin declined to comment.
For a time powerful investors continued to back Melvin with
Citadel LLC and Point72 Asset Management, where Plotkin had once
worked, investing billions in emergency cash in early 2021 amid
the meme stock losses.
Earlier this year, Plotkin told investors he wanted to
reorganize and shrink assets to $5 billion from roughly $8.7
billion and charge them lower fees, for a time. Investors
reacted strongly to the proposals and Plotkin was forced to
apologize not long after, saying he had made a mistake.
On Wednesday, Plotkin said he had begun the process of
liquidating the portfolio and would stop charging management
fees beginning June 1. He also said that he had "given
everything" he could but that it was not enough to "deliver the
returns you should expect."
At the end of the first quarter Melvin's biggest investments
included bets on Live Nation Entertainment, Hilton Worldwide
Holdings, Amazon and Datadog. Their stock prices have fallen
sharply in the last weeks, sparking speculation that a hedge
fund might be trying to unwind positions.
Plotkin was a star investor at Steven A. Cohen's hedge fund
which was previously called SAC Capital Advisors but left in
2014 to launch his own firm after SAC pleaded guilty to criminal
insider trading charges. Melvin Capital quickly attracted
attention and powerful investors and ended 2020, the year the
pandemic began, with gains of 52.5%.
From 2014 to 2020, Melvin boasted average annualized returns of
30%. Between the founding and now, the fund returned an average
11.9% per year.
(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss with additional reporting by
Mehnaz Yasmin in Bengaluru; Editing by Amy Caren Daniel and
Richard Pullin)
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