Dalio's $13 Billion Short: Bridgewater Unveils Its Biggest Ever Short Position

in market •  7 years ago 

Content adapted from this Zerohedge.com article : Source


by Tyler Durden

Last October, Italy's government was angry when the world's largest hedge fund, Ray Dalio's Bridgewater unveiled it had amassed a sizable $713 million short against Italian financial stocks, its biggest disclosed bearish bet in Europe.

Then last week, and just one month before Italy's March 4 elections - which the broader market stubbornly refuses to acknowledge are a risk factor - Bridgewater tripled down on its bearish bets against Italian banks and insurers, making the position the largest thematic short carried by the world's biggest hedge fund.

As we reported last Thursday, Bridgewater boosted its bearish bets against Italian companies to $3 billion and 18 firms, up four-fold from just over $713 million in early October, further infuriating Italian authorities. As Bloomberg added, Bridgewater's bearish bets against European companies as a whole totaled $3.3 billion, spread among 20 names. In addition to his previous negative exposure, Dalio disclosed a short position in transport-infrastructure provider Atlantia and added to its largest short bet, against lender Intesa Sanpaolo SpA.

The growing short comes just days after Dalio told a Davos audience that "holding cash is now stupid"... and literally days before the biggest market crash since Lehman.

Fast forward to today, when Dalio's bearish fascination is starting to get a little concerning, because according to the latest Bloomberg summary, Bridgewater now has at least $13.1 billion in European Union shorts, quadrupling the $3.2 billion short from last week, and over 18 times more than the fund's original position last October.

In the past week, Bridgewater put more than $1 billion to work betting against oil giant Total SA - making it the firm's largest disclosed short holding in Europe.

As Bloomberg notes, Europe's energy titan has been riding out the biggest industry downturn in a generation by selling assets and cutting spending. The hedge fund also started a bearish Airbus SE position, investing about $381 million against the aircraft maker. Among other short positions, it disclosed wagers against BNP Paribas SA, ING Groep NV and Banco Santander SA.

Amusingly, since the Feb. 8 regulatory filings were made public, Total fell 1% as markets slumped, while Dalio's other shorts, Airbus, BNP Paribas, ING Groep and Banco Santander sank roughly 2%.

A list of Bridgewater's top 10 shorts is shown below:

At the risk of repeating ourselves - which we think under these circumstances is worth it - we will remind readers that on January 24, Dalio told a naive, fawning Davos audience that:

"We are in this Goldilocks period right now. Inflation isn't a problem. Growth is good, everything is pretty good with a big jolt of stimulation coming from changes in tax laws. If you're holding cash, you're going to feel pretty stupid."

And as Dalio was dissembling, he was quietly assembling Bridgewater's biggest ever thematic short in his fund's history.

So yes, perhaps if you're holding cash, you will feel pretty stupid eventually, but not after last week's global market plunge; however, you will certainly feel much dumber if you actually believed Dalio.


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Whenever I see such big short Positions I simply wonder what kind of information they might have that the public didn´t get a hold of yet or simply isn´t widespread. Somehow I actually believe that they´ll make big money with it as we could enter a bearish period in the stock market eventually.

The question always is does a squeeze that inevitably happens force them to sell part, or all, of their position?

The bears are right eventually...it is just a matter of timing.

They are dealing in Italy which is not the strongest of economies or nations in Europe. It might be a good bet on that end of things.

I would think to be right, they need a step back in the global economy. I am not sure that is going to happen soon...it might be a year or more out.

This is the key quote:

"At the risk of repeating ourselves - which we think under these circumstances is worth it - we will remind readers that on January 24, Dalio told a naive, fawning Davos audience that:

"We are in this Goldilocks period right now. Inflation isn't a problem. Growth is good, everything is pretty good with a big jolt of stimulation coming from changes in tax laws. If you're holding cash, you're going to feel pretty stupid."

"And as Dalio was dissembling, he was quietly assembling Bridgewater's biggest ever thematic short in his fund's history."

What a hypocritical @sshole!

Indeed!

I also would choke on describing a Davos audience as 'naive'. Fawning, sure. But I doubt there were many in that audience that weren't accredited investors.

it may still have looked stupid to be holding cash at Davos IF the reason why was cuz you were going short the market =p

anyhow

hard for me get short exposure to Italian banks -- Why did Direxion have to liquidate their short EU Banks ETF. All they offer are Bullish ones lol 'the only way is up' mentality I guess no one wanted to short EU banks the last 2 years? --

While it appears that Western Europe is growing again, that growth rate is not evenly spread. The northern countries tend to do a lot better than the south. Italy has been struggling for years..I guess it hasnt changed.

This might be a very good play. If the global economy is going to consolidate some, a country like Italy will suffer more. Plus, I always question how strong the European banks are.

Of course, the problems with shorts is you can always get squeezed..hence even when right you are wrong.

I feel like cash is a losing bet, we are seeing the dollar decline, so if you don't have your money somewhere you're going to be losing. All the markets seem risky right now, and it sounds like they are just waiting out some crashes in Europe, could be smart, I'm surprised he's not shorting in the US

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Did you reach out to the author Tyler Durden? Seems like most, if not all the articles are written by him and I wouldn't be surprised if this was the author. Then again I'm not sure zerohedge allows authors to put their own work on other sites.

@zerohedge..bro he put his money to work on shorting the biggest frauds he could find. but he can't print money.can't say his money is sidelined. did he say it was long? ok, STFU already.this will indeed be interesting....Was it the usual suspects, Paulsen, Ackman, Soros, Goldman or was it the Fed....when Powell took over that 1st day? My bet is that Powell took the reins from Yellen and said the Fed would no longer engage in shorting the VIX for the benefit of levitation of the stock market. And if true- the SEC will not investigate. If false, the SEC WILL most definitely investigate. So we wait..thank you for sharing with us..

Yellen said the market was overpriced Sunday, the day before Powell took the office, and two days after she left it.

interesting information about the Italian market, adding knowledge and very rewarding.
Bridgewater makes Italian money market will slump. thanks @zer0hedge

I do not know how anyone could be buying into the stock market right now. The underlying value of everything is fake, inflated, and not tied to market value. If companies ever did state results with markets values - they would be bankrupt. I'm thinking about all the vehicles in port storage around the world. Even though a car sits there for years, it is counted as a marketable ride. I don't think so.

Great.......

good post your all post so informative thanks for sharing..

Amazing

france has a market valur of $1010 M ....woaahh !! didnt know that

Given the flag from @steemcleaners, I hope you can adapt your posting style to meet their guidelines. I appreciate getting links to zerohedge on Steemit for stories that are interesting.

Perhaps you can link to stories with a brief blurb about why you find the story interesting, and leave the text at zerohedge, to mollify Tyler Durden and @steemcleaners.

It's been a fun ride, but it's time to change some things.