Later adapted as a film, “The Big Short,” Michael Lewis‘ seminal book about the hedge funds that shorted the U.S. housing market before its eventual crash in 2008, shot several Wall Street pros to stardom. Among them were Porter Collins, Steve Eisman, Vincent Daniel and Danny Moses, who shorted mortgage-backed debt at FrontPoint Partners.
While the four made a killing from a short position in 2008, the Big Short alums are now focused more on going long. The traders reunited this week at an alternative investments conference in Miami, according to Bloomberg.
Collins, co-founder of Seawolf Capital LLC, said on the panel that he has continued his spirit of contrarianism by investing in Asian markets, where valuations are currently cheaper. Daniel holds similar sentiments, but his rationale is the expectation that the U.S. Dollar will weaken, which would benefit foreign assets.
Michael Burry, the founder of the hedge fund Scion Capital, was also featured prominently in the book and portrayed by Christian Bale in the film. Burry has also been bullish on China for several quarters — per his latest 13f filing, Scion Capital’s largest position is Alibaba Group Holding Ltd – ADR BABA.
The iShares MSCI China ETF MCHI tracks Chinese equities, which have traded cheaper than U.S. stocks for several years.
Moses is also looking at value in the market. The frequent CNBC guest likes gold, as reflected in the SPDR Gold Trust GLD.
Eisman, a University of Pennsylvania alum, touted homebuilder stocks given the shortage of new homes in the U.S. and anticipated easing of Federal Reserve monetary policy.
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