Moments ago, the 2016 edition of the Sohn Investment Conference started, a feeding frenzy for traders and hedge fund managers such as Gundlach, Einhorn and Chanos who descend on this popular annual “round table” to pitch their best and worst ideas. As always, the moment a company’s name is mentioned in a bullish or bearish context, its stock is sure to surge or slump, as the headline-hungry algos immediate pounce in the current reactionary market environment. But is following the advice of these hedge fund gurus such a good idea?
According to a Bloomberg analysis, out of all speakers in last year’s, 2015 Sohn Conference, only two had winning bets: this suggests – at least on the surface – that the winning trade is doing the opposite of what is recommended; however that is never the case and instead more clustering and “hedge fund hoteling” ensues, leading to violent blowups a la Valeant and Allergan, also leading to questions why hedge funds are “suddenly” a dying breed.
So for those interests, here is a brief summary of how last year’s picks did, courtesy of Bloomberg.
David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital:
Einhorn’s Sohn picks are fairing quite well, even if some of his other trades like going long SunEdison, Inc. are getting slammed. At the conference he took a shot at the fracking industry, hitting their high cash burn even as oil prices continued to decline. His main target was Pioneer Natural Resources Co., which is trading about 2 percent lower since he made his bearish call. “A business that burns cash and doesn’t grow isn’t worth anything,” he said at the time. Unfortunately for Einhorn, while Pioneer has fallen, he should have made one of his other bearish bets his main call. The others are down between 6 and 70 percent. Einhorn was also bearish on Concho Resources Inc. (down 9 percent), EOG Resources, Inc. (down 18 percent), Continental Resources Inc. (down 29 percent), and Whiting Petroleum Corp. (down 70 percent).
Barry Rosenstein of Jana Partners:
Rosenstein’s picks haven’t turned out quite the way he might have hoped. The activist investor told last year’s attendees that Qualcomm Inc. was extremely undervalued. Shares have since lost another 27 percent of their value. He also reiterated his bullish stance on Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc., which has fared slightly better but is still down about six percent since his call.
Keith Meister of Corvex:
It’s hard to tell if Meister should be in the winner or loser category. His pitch was a bullish call on Yum! Brands Inc, because he believed the firm should spin off its China business. While the company did indeed go ahead with the sale, shares are still lower since he made the call.
Leon Cooperman:
Leon Cooperman’s made a number of picks, with a few of them performing quite well like Alphabet Inc. (up 29 percent), The Dow Chemical Company (up 2 percent), and The Priceline Group Inc. (up 6 percent). Others have struggled with one name down 90 percent. The losing picks include AerCap Holdings NV (down 18 percent), Citigroup Inc. (down 15 percent), General Motors Co. (down 10 percent), a natural gas play in Gulf Coast Ultra Deep Royalty Trust (down 90 percent).
Larry Robbins, of Glenview:
Robbins has made a number of winning calls in years past, with a bearish bet on General Motors Co. before it went bankrupt and going long hospital stocks prior to Obamacare. Last year wasn’t one of his best as he suggested buying AbbVie Inc. and Brookdale Senior Living Inc., which are down 6 and 50 percent respectively.
Mala Gaonkar, co-portfolio manager at Lone Pine Capital LLC:
Gaonkar’s pick was doing quite well until it reported earnings last week. Microsoft Corp. ended up tumbling about seven percent after reporting quarterly results and took her winnings down to four percent.
Jeffrey Gundlach of DoubleLine Capital:
Gundlach had a slightly less conventional idea: buy Puerto Rican bonds. Attendees weren’t too surprised by his pick given that Bloomberg reported his fund’s stake in junk-rated Puerto Rican debt just a couple of weeks before his speech. His pick hasn’t done as bad as you might expect given the turmoil that has continued to plague the region since his call. The S&P Municipal Bond Puerto Rico Index is down about five percent.
Bill Ackman of Pershing Square Capital Management LP:
One of Ackman’s picks is performing quite well, but the other has been grabbing headlines for all of the wrong reasons. Jarden Corp. is up 15 percent since last May, but his bullish bet on Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc. has been demolished. The stock is now down 84 percent.
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