Hedge funds capitulate, investors brace for margin calls in market rout

By Summer Zhen, Samuel Shen and Carolina Mandl

HONG KONG/SHANGHAI/NEW YORK (Reuters) -Some hedge funds say they are offloading all or most of their holdings of stocks as U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war wipes out trillions of dollars of market value and forces them to curtail trading using borrowed cash.

In the three trading days following Trump's announcement of broad reciprocal tariffs on almost all countries, stock markets across the world have plummeted, and bonds have become both a haven and a bet on rate cuts by the Federal Reserve, turning on their head market assumptions before Trump took office.

The selloff on Wall Street has been vicious as investors that bet on U.S. exceptionalism and economic might stampede out of its markets.

The benchmark S&P 500 index fell 10.5% over two days and lost about $5 trillion in market value. China's CSI300 blue-chip index fell more than 5% on Monday, while the pan-European STOXX index is down over 14% from its March 3 all-time closing high and in correction territory.

William Xin, chairman of hedge fund Spring Mountain Pu Jiang Investment Management based in Shanghai, said he had liquidated all of his stock positions as the current geopolitical landscape is messy, and the risk of a global recession is rising.

"The macro picture is getting very chaotic, and I cannot see the future clearly at all," said Xin, who sold his China and Hong Kong-listed shares last Thursday, ahead of a public holiday on Friday.

As repositioning away of U.S. assets is likely to continue in the short run, Tara Hariharan, managing director at global macro hedge fund NWI Management, said trade ideas currently do not include stocks at the moment. New York-based NWI favors long Japan's yen versus the dollar and long the front-end of U.S. treasuries.

Hedge funds that pursue a long-short equity strategy have been particularly hard-hit as market volatility metrics surged, brokers said.

Hedge funds have been minting short positions at a breakneck pace. JPMorgan estimated net leverage, which refers to hedge funds' long minus short positions, was down and could be around the lowest since late 2023.

Commodity trading advisor funds, which trade future contracts, are bearish stocks at a record level, according to JPMorgan.

The positioning, the bank's equity strategy team, leaves them more susceptible to a squeeze if "there are any positive headlines." A short squeeze occurs when a stock price goes up and forces market participants to close their bets against the stock.

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