Scrambling to cover shorts in equities
Back in March, Reuters reported that hedge funds were using more leverage to make wagers on the stock market, but were less inclined to bet on the market’s direction due to heightened macroeconomic uncertainties. Reuters cited the example of long-short hedge fund Anson Funds, with $1.5 billion in assets under management, which had adopted a roughly neutral stance, with shorts and longs matching off. 1
Since then, stock markets have confounded expectations by rising even further despite continuing uncertainty about the macro-economic outlook – and, in particular, whether the US economy can achieve a ‘soft landing’ and how high interest rates across the Atlantic will go.
Now, having missed the global equity rally, hedge funds are resorting to higher leverage again, this time ‘to amplify returns, with the pressure being on them to deliver substantial returns to justify their high fees in an environment of elevated interest rates’, according to the stock research platform Quiver Quantitative. 2
Quiver added that this year, long-short equity hedge funds have lagged behind the benchmarks, primarily due to losses from short sales.
In June and July, hedge funds closed short positions and reduced risk at the most rapid rate in years as US stocks moved higher still and forced many short-sellers to purchase stocks at elevated prices, further propelling the rally.
Short covering has reduced hedge-fund leverage from its peak this year, yet leverage levels remained notably high in late July.
US Treasury yields rise higher than expected on sticky inflation