Sunday, December 18, 2011

Great Shades of 1929: Wall Street bullsh*t as volatility extends record run


According to the Stamford Advocate, Duke Buchan III's $1 billion hedge fund beat U.S. stocks by 46 percent in the decade through March, a period that included the steepest equity-market losses since the 1930s. Then came the selloff in August when global stocks suffered their worst nine-day drop since the 2008 financial crisis. For four days, The Dow Jones Industrial Average alternated between gains and losses of more than 400 points, the longest streak ever, and its intraday swings have averaged twice the level seen during the first seven months of the year. Last week, Buchan told clients he is shutting his firm Hunter Global Investors LP.

"Markets seem to be driven more by the latest news out of Europe than by a company's earnings prospects," Buchan, 48, said in a Dec. 8 investor letter. "We have not weathered the ensuing volatility well."

Traders who used to profit from price swings are struggling as record stock market volatility shows no signs of abating. Hedge funds are on track to post their second-worst year on record, with managers such as John Paulson seeing bets undermined by Europe's two-year sovereign-debt crisis and concerns over the U.S. economic recovery. U.S. mutual funds are headed for their weakest year in two decades, and the top Wall Street banks posted their worst quarter in trading and investment banking since the depths of the 2008 financial crisis.


Read more: http://www.stamfordadvocate.com/news/article/Wall-Street-confounded-as-volatility-extends-2408930.php#ixzz1gurfy7xL

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