Thursday, June 20, 2013

Hedge fund: former Chess Grandmaster sees stock market crash in China

Hedge fund Grandmaster sees stock market crash in China


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An investor covers her face with playing cards as she reacts to a photojournalist in front of an electronic board showing stock information at a brokerage house in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, May 3, 2013. REUTERS/Stringer
MONTE CARLO, Monaco | Thu Jun 20, 2013 4:42am EDT
(Reuters) - Former chess grandmaster-turned hedge fund manager Patrick Wolff is betting on a stock market crash in China, where he says corruption and bad debts have spiralled to dangerous levels.
Speaking to Reuters on the sidelines of the GAIM conference in Monaco this week, Wolff said investors were too focused on trying to work out when easy money policies will taper off in the United States and ignoring a looming correction in China.
"People are talking way too much about the Federal Reserve and not enough about China," he said. "We've been saying that the U.S. is the safest place to invest, while China is a crash waiting to happen."
He is short on Chinese stocks and generally long on U.S. equities.
Financial markets have sold off heavily in recent weeks on fears that U.S. quantitative easing - money printing to fund asset purchases - will end off sooner rather than later.
However, Wolff, who is managing member of San Francisco-based Grandmaster Capital, said it was a "non-issue" as the U.S. Federal Reserve was "highly unlikely" to tighten monetary policy without evidence of the U.S. economy overheating.
He was speaking before Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Wednesday the Fed could start to pare back its monthly purchases of U.S. Treasuries before the end of the year if the economic rally continues.
Instead, Wolff said investors should pay more attention to China, whose rampant growth over the past decade has helped support global growth and fuelled an unsustainable boom in commodityprices, but which now "just looks awful".
"China's centrally-planned economy inevitably means massive corruption and a massive misallocation of capital," he said, pointing to increasing funding problems for Chinese companies.
"Interbank lending rates have shot up and many companies are facing a cash crunch."
Wolff, who was U.S. chess champion in 1992 and 1995 and at his peak ranked in the world top 50, is positive on U.S. stocks, which account for most of the stocks he owns, and short Chinese stocks. Shorting means betting on a lower price for a security in the future.
Wolff, who became a fund manager after reading Warren Buffett's investor letters, said his confidence in the U.S. economy was based on its lower dependence on growth in other countries, as well as the end of the housing slump and the recapitalisation of its banking system.
"We have been and remain structurally bullish on U.S. equities," he said. "The kinds of companies that were massively overvalued 15 years ago have become good investments - blue-chip, large-cap, quality businesses. It's technology companies but plenty of other companies too."
He said he doesn't like stocks in the energy, materials, mining and industrials sector, which he says have outperformed in the last decade on the back of Chinese growth. "These are exactly the wrong place to be looking," he said.

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