Investors are betting more than $1 trillion on a collapse in stock prices

July 21 (Bloomberg) — Investors worldwide are betting more than $1 trillion on a collapse in stock prices.

Never Have So Many Short Sellers Made So Much Money

Managers from William Ackman to Jim Rogers made a total of at least $1.4 billion in July with wagers against U.S. mortgage financiers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, data compiled by Bloomberg as of last week show. Harbinger Capital Partners staked $665 million that U.K. mortgage lender HBOS Plc would drop and Sao Paulo-based hedge-fund manager Francisco Meirelles de Andrade‘s short selling of Cia. Vale do Rio Doce is also paying off.

More than $1.4 trillion of equities worldwide are now on loan, about a third higher than at the start of 2007, data compiled by Spitalfields Advisors, the London-based firm specializing in securities lending, show. Almost all of that is being used to speculate that shares will fall, according to James Angel, a finance professor at Georgetown University who studies short selling. The global economic slowdown, $453 billion in bank losses and an explosion of funds that can profit from stock declines spurred the increase in short selling, helping send 22 of 23 countries in the MSCI World Index into bear markets.

“It’s a huge amount of money,” said Peter Hahn, a London- based research fellow for Cass Business School and a former managing director at Citigroup Inc. “Shorts have come a long way. They are getting into the mainstream, and long holders need to understand the shorts are not evil.”

$11 Trillion

While U.S. and U.K. regulators tighten rules on short sellers amid concern they’re accelerating more than $11 trillion in global stock losses this year, countries from Indonesia to India are opening up to the practice, which involves borrowing stock to sell it on the expectation it can be purchased at a lower price before paying back the loan.

Assets at so-called 130/30 and 120/20 funds, or those that are allowed to both hold stocks and short them, may climb to $2 trillion by 2010 from $140 billion in 2007, according to a study last year by Westborough, Massachusetts-based Tabb Group. Spitalfields estimates these funds may borrow an additional $600 billion by 2010.

Spitalfields was founded by Mark Faulkner and Bill Cuthbert in 2004 after careers in securities lending and investment banking at firms including New York-based Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank AG, respectively.

Short selling on the New York Stock Exchange rose to 4.6 percent of total shares last month, the highest since at least 1931, according to data compiled by Bespoke Investment Group LLC, the Harrison, New York-based firm that manages money for wealthy investors and provides financial research to institutions.

Wipe Out Shareholders

Short selling of Washington-based Fannie Mae and McLean, Virginia-based Freddie Mac, which own or guarantee about half of the $12 trillion of U.S. mortgages, surged before the shares plunged this month on concern they will require a bailout that would wipe out shareholders.

Fannie Mae tumbled 64 percent from the end of June, when so-called short interest stood at 138.7 million shares, through July 15, according to data compiled by Bloomberg and the NYSE. Freddie Mac sank 68 percent from the end of June through July 15 after short interest reached almost 83 million on June 30, the highest since at least 1991.

Even after a 90 percent rebound by Fannie Mae and a 75 percent surge by Freddie Mac in the final three days of trading last week, that would have left the shorts with a combined profit, excluding costs, of at least $1.4 billion from June 30 through July 15, the data show.

Survival of the Fittest

Ackman, 42, who oversees $6 billion at Pershing Square Capital Management LP in New York, said on July 15 he had short positions in both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Rogers, 65, said on July 14 that he hadn’t covered his short positions in Fannie Mae and would increase his bet if the shares were to rally.

“Short sellers are a very important part of the ecosystem of our financial markets,” said Angel, a professor at Georgetown’s McDonough School of Business in Washington. “The same way that lions go after a herd, they go after the weaker animals. The shorts will pick on a company where there’s a legitimate controversy over its valuation.”

European short sellers have also profited during the sell- off. The Euro Stoxx 50 Short Index rose 29 percent in the first half of 2008, the best performance since at least 1992. The Euro Stoxx 50 tumbled 24 percent in the period, its worst ever start to a year.

`Market for Speculators’

A slump in British banks helped spur the U.K. Financial Services Authority to impose rules on June 20 requiring firms to disclose short positions in companies that sell shares in rights offerings, when those positions exceed 0.25 percent of the company’s stock. The FSA cited short bets on June 13 for “severe volatility in the shares of companies conducting rights issues.”

Harbinger Capital, the New York-based hedge fund run by Philip Falcone, the former head of high-yield trading at Barclays Capital, disclosed a short position of 3.29 percent in HBOS as of June 20. Edinburgh-based HBOS has slumped 64 percent this year.

“The market is becoming a market for speculators rather than a market for investors,” said Roger Lawson, London-based director at the U.K. Shareholders’ Association. “These guys are making fat profits out of these market maneuvers. It should be restricted to a very limited level of market cap, otherwise it becomes market manipulation.”

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission last week limited so-called naked short sales of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and brokerages. In such a strategy, speculators sell shares they haven’t secured first. The decision comes amid an investigation of whether trading abuses contributed to the collapse of Bear Stearns Cos. in March.

`Send a Message’

James Chanos, president of Kynikos Associates Ltd., says the new rules won’t deter most short sellers from making legitimate bets against companies.

“The SEC is trying to send a message — I am again not quite sure what the message is,” Chanos, a short seller and one of the first investors to raise questions about Enron Corp.’s accounting, said on Bloomberg Television from London. “I am just not sure that this was an issue at all for the equity prices of these companies.”

The SEC’s move “squeezed” some short sellers, forcing them to close positions they shorted earlier by buying the shares, Bespoke data show. Among Standard & Poor’s 1500 companies, those with the highest short interest gained the most, rising 15.1 percent on July 16 and July 17, according to the firm’s data.

So-called short covering also helped financial stocks in the S&P 500 surge 12 percent on July 16, the biggest-ever gain.

While regulators in the U.K. and U.S. move to limit some types of shorting, the practice is increasing elsewhere. India’s capital markets watchdog said in December it would lift a six- year ban on short selling. Indonesia followed last month, allowing the practice for the first time.

Shorting Brazil

In Brazil, equities on loan in June jumped 22 percent from a month earlier to a record $23.3 billion, according to the Brazilian Clearing and Depository Corp. Shorting increased after the Bovespa Index climbed to an all-time high on May 20.

Francisco Meirelles de Andrade, a hedge-fund manager at Nest Investimentos Ltda., is shorting Rio de Janeiro-based Vale, the world’s biggest iron-ore producer, which tumbled 6.5 percent last week after its share sale raised less than some analysts expected. His Nest Fund Ltd. Class Long Short Equities fund returned 31 percent in the 12 months through June.

“Short selling helps markets become more efficient,” said Dallas-based David Tice, 53, founder and manager of the Prudent Bear Fund. “Short selling is here to stay.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Alexis Xydias in London at at [email protected].

Last Updated: July 21, 2008 17:20 EDT

Source: Bloomberg

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