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Dymon Is Betting on Cheap Tail Risk Amid Market Complacency

Dymon Hedge Fund Wagers 30% on Tail Risk Amid Market Complacency

(Bloomberg) -- Dymon Asia Capital (Singapore) Pte. is positioned so that almost one-third of its macro hedge fund’s portfolio would benefit from black-swan market events and dislocations, Chief Investment Officer Danny Yong said.

The rising popularity of passive and algorithm-driven investing has helped fuel “enhanced market complacency,” Yong said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. While outsized market moves are becoming less frequent, the next major correction could be as big as the global financial crisis, he said.

“In the past, you see dislocations maybe twice a year. But now it may end up being more stretched out where it would be two years or three years before you see a big move,” Yong said. “If and when that happens, my belief is it will be a lot larger than it used to be.”

Dymon is investing in interest rate and currency options that Yong believes are underpricing risks, such as U.S.-China trade talks falling apart and the Federal Reserve being forced to cut rates further. He also recommends owning gold or call options on the metal as a hedge.

Dymon has assets under management of about $5 billion, with around $1.5 billion of that in its main Dymon Asia Macro Fund. The firm started out in 2008 with $113 million, and attracted Tudor Investment Corp. as its first outside backer.

Because of the built-in leverage of options, Dymon Asia Macro Fund would lose no more than 3% of its assets if the market dislocations do not happen.

Read More: Dymon Pulls Off Biggest Monthly Gain in Macro Fund’s History

The firm’s macro fund may hold even more so-called tail-risk or dislocation-type investments at various points, Yong said Monday in Singapore. Such bets don’t necessarily represent a bearish view on markets, but rather whether the securities are appropriately pricing in the likelihood of market events.

China Stocks

“We’re in an environment where things feel very stable, ironically, at least in the financial markets, whereas politically, things feel very polarized and unstable,” said Yong, who earlier in his career traded for Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Ken Griffin’s Citadel Securities LLC. “Every portfolio should look for ways to hedge the tails, or in our case where we look to profit from certain outsized moves or breakouts. I think it’s important to look for undervalued options.”

What Yong is preparing for is the chance of a global economic slowdown triggered in part by the Trump administration’s tough stance on China. Without a trade deal, China would be forced to cut interest rates, resort to more fiscal stimulus and possibly begin quantitative easing, boosting domestic stocks and bonds and weakening the yuan.

He added that markets were also underpricing the possibility that slowing global growth will have a negative impact on a range of other Asian currencies, from the Taiwan dollar to the South Korean Won.

“It’s becoming more clear to us that it’s evolved from an ‘America First’ policy to a ‘China Last’ policy, so our view is they will continue to put a lot of pressure on China,” he said.

The search for yield in a low interest rate environment, fear of missing out in a rising market and the disappearance of bank proprietary trading desks have all contributed to the broad investor complacency, Yong said. One telltale sign that markets are getting closer to the tipping point is European junk bonds trading at negative yields, he added.

While the “self-perpetuating” euphoria may continue for a while, the price divergence from market fundamentals can’t be sustained, Yong said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Bei Hu in Hong Kong at bhu5@bloomberg.net;David Ramli in Singapore at dramli1@bloomberg.net;Erik Schatzker in New York at eschatzker@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Katrina Nicholas at knicholas2@bloomberg.net, Russell Ward

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