Hedge Funds Are Playing A Dangerous Game On Japan And China

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Investors stand at trading terminals in front of electronic stock boards at a securities brokerage in Shanghai, China. (Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)

A macro hedge fund's closure has sent shockwaves across Asia's asset-management world.

Singapore-based Asia Genesis Asset Management Pte is shutting down its macro fund after losing 18.8% in the first weeks of January from a wrong-way bet on Japan and China. Chief Investment Officer Chua Soon Hock was bearish on Japanese equities and bullish on Chinese stocks, and he was caught out by a sharp selloff in the Hang Seng Index and an equally impressive rally in the Nikkei 225 Stock Average.

Chua is no ordinary manager. He has a long, successful track record investing in north Asia. His Japan macro fund, which ran between 2000 and 2009, delivered an annualized 18.7% return and outperformed the Nikkei by 388%. From its May 2020 inception to last October, his latest Asia fund notched positive monthly returns 64% of the time. January's sharp drawdown was, thus, cruel and unusual. 

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Has Chua lost his touch? Why didn't he put a stop-loss(1)on his long-short trade faster? Lingering questions aside, Asia Genesis is a cautionary tale to those who bet on political and economic events. 

Both Japan China may be going through a structural break, in that what happened in the past no longer offers a window into the future. For now, macro trading doesn't work, at least not in these two important markets. 

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For years, investors were conditioned to brush away a run-up in Japanese stocks as another flash in the pan, while salivating at any rumor of stimulus measures from Beijing. After all, they were guided by trial and tribulation. In 2013, foreigners poured in about $155 billion, wholeheartedly embracing Abenomics. That euphoria evaporated as investors became disillusioned with a perpetual wait for structural reforms and for the Bank of Japan to hit its 2% inflation target. 

Meanwhile, Beijing has an enviable history of shock and awe. The shantytown redevelopment, a poverty alleviation program that replaced older, rundown dwellings with new, affordable housing, pulled China's market out of a 2015 slump. The government's decisive and effective Covid controls in the early days of the pandemic kept the economy going, while much of the world was in chaos. 

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These historical lessons perhaps guided Chua and his strong convictions, even as many money managers were going the other way. “The Nikkei-Hang Seng spread has moved from -16,000 to +16,000 over the past decade, back to levels before China joined the WTO,” he wrote in the closure letter, referring to the relative outperformance of Japanese stocks.

Chua was burned by the strength of hot money flows into Japan and too much faith in Beijing's policymakers. In the letter, he marveled that Nikkei ETFs were bought at a 20% premium to their net asset value in mainland China, and said he underestimated “how long this will continue.” Meanwhile, “inconsistent market support from China resulted in the persistent and substantial down move in the Hang Sang Index.” 

To be sure, the possible structural changes may just be a mirage, and Japan and China will go back to their old ways. Hot money is fickle, while the Japanese may still stay away from their home market even with the arrival of tax-free investment accounts. At the same time, China's stock market rout has become a political problem that may ultimately force Beijing's hand. Chua's vision may ultimately be proven right. 

This year, everyone loves Japan and hates China. But don't construct a long-short trade either way. Macro funds work well when there are clear trends, such as the unstoppable dollar rally in 2022. As the BOJ and President Xi Jinping keep markets in the dark, one can be caught out by either side. “I have lost my knowledge, trading and psychological edge,” conceded Chua. Let that veteran's words be a warning to those who are still in the game. 

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More From Bloomberg Opinion:

  • Japan Can Guilt-Trip Its Stocks Past 38,915.87: Gearoid Reidy
  • Hong Kong Faces Repeat of 1998 Asia Financial Crisis: Shuli Ren
  • Buffett and BOJ Can Aid Japan Stocks in 2024, Too: Gearoid Reidy

(1) A stop-loss is an order to sell a security when it reaches a certain price to limit losses on an investor's position.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Shuli Ren is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering Asian markets. A former investment banker, she was a markets reporter for Barron's. She is a CFA charterholder.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com/opinion

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