How big hedge funds would trade sticky inflation

Thu Feb 16 2023
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How big hedge funds would trade sticky inflation

Hedge funds, pinning little hope on central banks’ attempts to cool inflation, are spotting ways to profit from climbing interest rates.

Data this week showed U.S consumer prices accelerated in January, pushing two-year Treasury yields to their highest since November as investors braced for inflation proving stickier than hoped.

Five prominent hedge funds shared five ideas using five different asset classes to profit from inflation so pugnacious it might force the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates higher for longer.

Ed Cole, managing director of discretionary investments at Man GLG, believes that eventually, inflation will fall sharply because earnings will fall and unemployment will rise.

Corners of the market where valuations have run the highest now face the sharpest reversal of fortune, said Cole.

Communications, consumer discretionary stocks (such as fashion brands) and tech companies have posted the best stock price performance against a backdrop of deteriorating earnings expectations, he said.

“If you have conviction that inflation will be stubborn, the opportunity for continued multiple contraction is significant, and being short these sectors, particularly in the more speculative parts – the non-profitable parts of tech – is attractive,” said Cole.

Colin Lancaster, global head of discretionary macro and fixed income at Schonfeld, favours selling interest rate futures based on the cost of borrowing in the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR), a benchmark interest rate.

Lancaster favours a trade selling long-term borrowing costs against shorter-term ones, on the view that the spread between them will decline.

“Concern now for markets is that reacceleration of the economy will lead to higher terminal rates,” said Lancaster.

Brian Hessel, chief risk officer and COO at Global Credit Advisers, believes the pricing in of higher interest rates has not reached the riskiest parts of the corporate bond market.

He favours taking a short position, a bet that an asset price will weaken, on single name high yield credits or the indices that track the performance of these companies.

“If a soft landing is not properly engineered, defaults rise and liquidity events begin to happen, credit spreads will widen,” said Hessel. Hessel says to avoid a short squeeze, the firm keeps a mixed portfolio of longs and shorts.

Doug King, chief executive officer at RCMA Asset Management, said Europe’s mild winter has helped push gas prices down sharply. Energy prices surged after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year, exacerbating inflation pressures, and forcing a global scramble to look for other sources of natural gas.

King believes that in the next few years, the United States, in order to meet its own domestic demand will increase its ability to meet the world’s needs.

Buying U.S. long-dated natural gas futures for these reasons and also, he added, “in an inflationary cost/wage environment looks compelling.”

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