The National - News

IS BILLIONAIR­E STEVE COHEN POISED TO MAKE A COMEBACK?

In our monthly round up of the world’s richest people, assets manager could be set for a big return and Buffett says stocks still beat bonds

-

STEVE COHEN

Officially, Steve Cohen is undecided about starting a hedge fund. Unofficial­ly, he’s got marketers poised to sign up clients and take in money early next year.

ShoreBridg­e Capital Partners, the company hired last year to gauge interest in a such a fund, has told prospectiv­e clients to expect a trove of marketing materials in the next several weeks, according to people familiar with the plans. It will include due diligence documents, track records and other informatio­n investors need to decide whether they will pony up cash for the new firm, Stamford Harbor Capital.

It is the clearest evidence yet that Mr Cohen is planning a comeback after being barred from managing outside capital until January 1, 2018. And it comes at an opportune time. The billionair­e’s returns are just beginning to rebound after 18 months of barely making money at his family office, Point 72 Asset Management. He’s now up about 5 per cent year-to-date, according to people familiar with the performanc­e.

Although most hedge fund investors expect billions to flow to the new firm, it’s less clear whether Mr Cohen can regain his superstar status of about 30 per cent annualised returns achieved when he ran SAC Capital Advisors. Since returning client money in the beginning of 2014, markets have become increasing­ly dominated by passive investing, a trend that many a stock-picker has blamed for lacklustre performanc­e. Mr Cohen, 61, has also lost some seasoned portfolio managers when he became a family office.

“Markets have changed and there are still a lot of questions around how the new firm will be structured,” said Brad Alford, a former SAC investor who runs Alpha Capital Management, a consultant search service in Atlanta. “It remains to be seen whether he can rebuild to his former glory.”

SAC pleaded guilty to securities fraud in 2013, and agreed to pay a record US$1.8 billion fine and convert to a family office. Mr Cohen wasn’t charged with wrongdoing. A Cohen spokesman said last year that Stamford Harbor wouldn’t seek external money before the terms of the settlement lapse.

YASUMITSU SHIGETA

Yasumitsu Shigeta, the founder and chairman of Hikari Tsushin, was once among the world’s richest persons, before earnings disasters caused the company’s shares to sink 99 per cent in 2000. Almost two decades later, some investors are having a second look at the Japanese company, and recent market moves suggest they like what they see.

Shares of the office-equipment seller have jumped

24 per cent this year to the highest since 2000, outperform­ing the Topix stock index’s 5 per cent gain. Three of four analysts surveyed by Bloomberg have a buy recommenda­tion on its equity. In the bond market, Hikari Tsushin sold its longest-ever notes this month, and the issuance amount was increased due to strong investor demand.

Shigeta’s company has come a long way. A darling of the stock market in the 1990s, Hikari Tsushin was considered one of Japan’s promising new firms along with SoftBank, until it faced a crisis in 2000: its stock sank as its mobile phone sales business unexpected­ly lost money. Now the market is bullish once again toward the seller of everything from copiers to office water servers to mobiles, as equity investors cheer its rising profits and regular shareholde­r payouts, while bond buyers appreciate the extra yields on its notes.

Hikari Tsushin is “a very exciting stock from our perspectiv­e,” said Richard Kaye, a portfolio adviser at a Japan unit of Comgest Global Investors SAS, which has about $100 million invested in the company’s stock. The shares are cheap, the company’s business model is attractive and it’s growing steadily, according to Mr Kaye.

Hikari Tsushin’s net income climbed to ¥39bn ($358m) in the 12 months ended March 31, from ¥7.8bn five years earlier. Mr Kaye expects the firm’s annual net profit to break above ¥50bn in the coming five years. The earnings recovery follows years of restructur­ing that involved the company closing mobile-phone retail outlets, while it expanded sales to corporate clients including office automation and also started selling insurance.

WARREN BUFFETT

Warren Buffett, the billionair­e chairman and chief executive of Berkshire Hathaway, said the rally in markets over the last several years has made it harder to find bargains, but that stocks remain his choice over bonds.

When asked why cash has

been piling up at Berkshire, he told Bloomberg Television’s David Westin, “It tells us stocks aren’t as cheap as they’ve been most of the time.” Buying shares after the 2008 financial crisis, Mr Buffett said, was like “shooting fish in a barrel.”

In a separate interview with CNBC, the Berkshire chief said he continued buying stock in Apple. this year, even as one of his deputies was selling. And he tamped down on speculatio­n that Kraft Heinz would pursue a takeover of Mondelez Internatio­nal. Berkshire is the largest shareholde­r in Kraft Heinz and controls the company along with buyout firm 3G Capital.

Mr Buffett, 87, built Berkshire into a sprawling conglomera­te over the past five decades through shrewd stock picks and takeovers. The company’s dozens of subsidiari­es now include insurers, manufactur­ers, retailers and a railroad. Its stock portfolio – which includes multibilli­on-dollar stakes in companies such as Wells Fargo and Coca Cola – was valued at more than $135bn at the end of June.

Stocks “have got less attractive as they’ve gone along,” Buffett told Westin. “They’re still very attractive compared to bonds” because interest rates are so low.

The S&P 500 is in its second-longest bull market on record, having more than tripled since March 2009 in a rally that has added almost $19 trillion to share values. In 2017 alone the gauge has closed at record highs 30 times.

Mr Buffett has been finding some smaller investment­s this year. In June, he threw a lifeline to Home Capital Group, an embattled Canadian home lender. Its shareholde­rs are scheduled to vote on a second part of that transactio­n next month, which would increase Berkshire’s stake from almost 20 per cent to 38 per cent.

RAKESH JHUNJHUNWA­LA AND RADHAKISHA­N DAMANI

The Metropolit­an Stock Exchange of India plans to woo brokerages to execute large stock trades on its venue, as a new management team tries to breathe life into a bourse that has floundered for a decade.

Backed by billionair­es Rakesh Jhunjhunwa­la and Radhakisha­n Damani, MSEI aims to wade into the block deals segment, which is worth as much as 5tn rupees ($78bn), according to chief executive Udai Kumar. India’s regulator defines a block as a single trade having at least 500,000 shares or a minimum value of 50m rupees. Money managers like dealing in large sizes because it ensures transactio­ns are done before the market can hear about them and react by raising or lowering prices.

“We are telling institutio­nal investors to come to our platform – there will be no slippages or price impact,” said Mr Kumar, who was named chief executive last year to turn around the bourse. The MSEI is in talks with half a dozen large investment banks to bring in such deals, he said.

That’s easier said than done. Despite starting in 2008, MSEI has failed to seriously threaten its rivals. It had a 4.3 per cent share of currency derivative­s at the end of March, and barely exists in India’s $2tn equity market, which is dominated by the National Stock Exchange of India and BSE.

The company has struggled to make a mark since a payment default in 2013 at a related exchange forced the original founders to sell. A clutch of financial institutio­ns now own more than 34 per cent of MSEI, as do investors

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? AP; Bloomberg; Reuters ?? Clockwise from left, Berkshire Hathaway chief executive Warren Buffett; Indian billionair­e broker Rakesh Jhunjhunwa­la; asset manager Steve Cohen; Yasumitsu Shigeta, the founder of Hikari Tsushin
AP; Bloomberg; Reuters Clockwise from left, Berkshire Hathaway chief executive Warren Buffett; Indian billionair­e broker Rakesh Jhunjhunwa­la; asset manager Steve Cohen; Yasumitsu Shigeta, the founder of Hikari Tsushin
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates