Two years after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in the 2008 financial crisis, hedge fund billionaire David Tepper made a bold market call on CNBC about the power of the Federal Reserve that made investors money all decade.
Central banks here and around the world have kept interest rates very low - and in some places, Europe and Japan, rates have gone negative. U.S. stocks have been the beneficiaries, propelling equities from their March 2009 lows to their longest and best-performing bull market ever.
On “Squawk Box” on Sept. 24, 2010, Tepper took the old adage, “Don’t fight the Fed” to the next level. The founder of Appaloosa Management said that U.S. central bank efforts to support the economy with near-zero rates and massive bond buying, known as quantitative easing, will make most investment choices go up.
Tepper, a Pittsburgh native, started Appaloosa in 1993, and grew it into a powerhouse, returning 25% a year, making clients and himself billions of dollars. In 2016, he changed his tax residency and corporate headquarters from New Jersey to Florida, where there’s no income tax.
He made a name for himself during the financial crisis through investments in depressed bank securities and other bold calls over the last 26 years. Tepper’s fund made $7.5 billion in 2009 on a return of 132%, made mostly by betting on a resurgence in financials.
In May, Tepper said he’s planning to return Appaloosa’s capital to investors, converting it to a family office. Appaloosa managed about $14 billion in assets, according to recent estimates, with Tepper’s own money making up about 70% of the fund.
Sources told The Wall Street Journal that Tepper was looking to concentrate on managing the Carolina Panthers NFL franchise, which he purchased last year for a record $2.2 billion.
Tepper’s net worth is estimated at $12 billion, according to Forbes. He’s known as one of the most successful hedge fund managers of his generation and also a generous philanthropist. Tepper, 62, got his MBA at Carnegie Mellon, and he’s donated more than $100 million to the school.
In his 2010 analysis of the market conditions and central bank climate then, Tepper talked about the Fed “put” - or the equivalent of an options play, in which the government will do whatever it needs to keep the capital markets from sinking below a designated level.
“What, I’m going to say, ‘No Fed, I disagree with you, I don’t want to be long equities?’” said Tepper at the time. “We’re a bond place, but we changed up to a little bit more equities recently.”
“Either the economy is going to get better by itself in the next three months. ... What assets are going to do well? Stocks are going to do well, bonds won’t do so well, gold won’t do as well,” he said then. “Or the economy is not going to pick up in the next three months and the Fed is going to come in with QE.”
Shortly after Tepper’s September 2010 appearance, the Fed in November of that year announced QE2. The first round of QE had ended in March 2010.
The Fed-driven stock market rally that ensued became known as the “Tepper rally,” with the S&P 500 gaining about 45% until then-Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke discussed in June 2013 slowing what was then the third round of QE.
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17 дек 2019