The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Hedge funds that beat Asia turmoil are looking to China for 2023

-

“In equities, the China reopening trade will benefit travel, hospitalit­y and luxury stocks in particular.” Kenneth Kan

SINGAPORE: For most Asian hedge funds, 2022 proved to be a year of pain as a gauge of regional fund returns finished the year down 8.3%.

But some money managers beat the odds and turned a profit.

In a volatile era where active trading should theoretica­lly trump index investing, here’s how they did it and some of the opportunit­ies they see in the year ahead.

Dymon Asia Capital’s MSIF fund enjoyed a 5.1% gain in 2022, growing its assets under management to Us$2.3bil (Rm9.7bil).

The key drivers to returns came from anticipati­ng directiona­l moves in Asian currencies, relative value trades in rates, and volatility trades in equities, according to Kenneth Kan, Dymon Asia Capital deputy chief executive officer.

For the year ahead, China’s reopening is a theme much of the firm is watching. Chinese “revenge travelling” after the lifting of restrictio­ns could help currencies such as the Thai baht, the Singapore dollar, the South Korean won and the euro.

Dymon said consumptio­n activities have already started picking up and expects this to accelerate after the Lunar New Year holidays end.

In a strong US dollar environmen­t, “one could put on a relative value forex trade against another country that could see fewer tourists from China,” Kan said, citing India as an example with comparativ­ely few Chinese arrivals.

“In equities, the China reopening trade will benefit travel, hospitalit­y and luxury stocks in particular.”

Singapore-based Modular Asset Management, helmed by Millennium

Management alumnus Jimmy Lim, scored a 14.3% gain without a down month last year, with its assets under management sitting at Us$1.1bil (Rm4.65bil).

One trade that did well was a year-long bet through November on the Singapore dollar to strengthen against a basket of currencies of its trading partners.

It anticipate­d the island state to be the first in the region to exit Covid restrictio­ns, leading to higher trade and tourism flows.

A further boost came from the central bank’s move to strengthen the currency to combat inflation, according to Lim. Modular built a position in October that would profit from a rebound of the yen when it weakened to around 150 to the dollar.

The company benefited when Japan reopened its borders that month, Lim added.

It also had various Japanese government bond wagers, anticipati­ng earlier-than-expected Bank of Japan yield curve control changes.

Modular started betting in November that China would exit Covid restrictio­ns sooner than the market anticipate­d, shifting focus to boosting consumptio­n and helping hard-hit industries to stabilise and recover.

“This would mean support especially in the property sector and also easing of technology sector constraint­s,” Lim said.

“In this process, liquidity will have to be kept loose or at least not tightened.”

Meanwhile, Chua Soon Hock retired from the hedge fund industry for many years before deciding to return with a fund in 2020.

Last year, his Asia Genesis Macro Fund returned 15.32%, with assets standing at Us$173mil (Rm732mil).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia