An investor speaks on her phone next to an electronic board showing stock information at a brokerage house in Shanghai on January 27, 2016. Shanghai stocks closed lower on January 27, extending a 6.42-per cent plunge the previous day on worries over the weak economy after data showed industrial profit accelerated declines in December, dealers said.  AFP
An investor speaks on her phone next to an electronic board showing stock information at a brokerage house in Shanghai on January 27, 2016. Shanghai stocks closed lower on January 27, extending a 6.42Show more

Sell now, advises China’s star investor



Huang Weimin, the hedge fund manager whose Chinese stock index futures wagers returned more than 6,200 per cent last year, has some advice for investors: sell your shares now, before it’s too late.

The 45-year-old former worker at a state-owned company, a virtual unknown until last year, has become a star of the Chinese futures market after timely bets on the direction of share prices propelled his Yourong Fund to the top of the country’s performance rankings.

He has carried the winning streak into 2016, returning 35 per cent until January 22 after selling stock index futures just days before the market’s worst-ever start to a year.

The Shanghai Composite Index dropped by 0.5 per cent to 2,735.56, extending Tuesday’s 6.4 per cent plunge, bringing losses this year to 22.7 per cent.

Mr Huang, who opened the Yourong Fund in 2014, says China’s benchmark Shanghai Composite Index could drop another 15 per cent in the first half as slowing economic growth and a weaker yuan fuel capital outflows. While he is sticking with bearish futures bets to take advantage of further losses, he says the average Chinese stock investor would be better off shifting into cash.

“I’m not optimistic about this year,” said Mr Huang, a self-taught trader who manages more than 100 million yuan (Dh55.8m) in the Yourong Fund and separate client accounts that use similar strategies. “My advice is to hold cash, wait and watch.”

Many of China’s 99 million investors appear to be doing just that. Volumes in the nation’s US$5.6 trillion cash equities market slumped to the lowest level in three months last week, while trading of stock index futures has dropped about 99 per cent since June. A bungled government attempt to introduce market circuit breakers in the first week of this year deepened investor pessimism after the mechanisms sparked panic instead of restoring calm.

Mr Huang’s ability to profit from the turbulence has made him a standout in China’s hedge fund industry, which has struggled to cope with price swings that reached the most extreme levels since 1997 last year. More than 700 funds were forced to liquidate prematurely in 2015 and this year’s slump in the Shanghai Composite has left many more on the brink of shutting down.

The Yourong Fund was the best performer last year among 310 private Chinese futures funds tracked by Shenzhen Rongzhi Investment Consultant. Mr Huang’s closest rival was up slightly more than 1,000 per cent, while more than a fifth of his peers posted losses, according to Shenzhen Rongzhi, which collects performance figures directly from the financial institutions where funds hold their trading accounts to ensure the data’s authenticity.

To make money last year, Mr Huang had to be nimble. He was bullish for much of the first half, building long positions in stocks and equity index futures as the Shanghai Composite surged to seven-year highs. After trimming his equity exposure in May, he bet against the market in the second half of June as shares tumbled.

One-day profit

When volatility increased at the end of that month, Mr Huang turned to short-term wagers. A short-term bet on Everbright Sec­urities that he sold the following day, for example, produced an 11 per cent return on June 30 as the market posted a brief rally, he said in an interview with Bloomberg News last week from China’s southern Fujian province. Mr Huang moved in and out of the market over the next two months, making one of his most profitable bets in late August after positioning for losses in stock index futures before a rout that sent the Shanghai Composite down as much as 25 per cent in just two weeks.

“It’s like surfing,” said Mr Huang, who became a full-time investor in 2006 after quitting his job at a state-owned company. “You have to dance on top of the waves.”

Amplifying returns

Aside from good timing, Mr Huang’s outsized returns were made possible by the built-in leverage of futures. The purchase or sale of a futures contract typically requires an initial deposit, known as margin, that is just a fraction of the value of the underlying assets. That means even small price changes can lead to big profits – or losses – for holders of the derivatives.

Mr Huang sees China’s stock market coming under pressure this year from the economic slowdown and a potential surge in the supply of new shares.

GDP growth fell to 6.9 per cent last year, the weakest pace since 1990, as about $1 trillion of capital flowed out of the country last year and the yuan posted its biggest annual drop in two decades. Despite six interest rate cuts by China’s central bank, the latest economic indicators for December showed growth is still ­slowing.

“When you add a lot of cold ­water into the pot, the firewood we have is for sure not enough,” Mr Huang said.

Recovery signals

With 660 Chinese companies waiting to sell shares via initial public offerings, Mr Huang said the additional supply could div­ert funds from existing shares. The impact could be even bigger if policymakers follow through on plans for a registration system, which would reduce the government’s ability to control the pace of offerings.

Li Yuanchao, China’s vice president, said in an interview in Davos last week that the government is willing to keep intervening in the stock market to make sure a few speculators do not benefit at the expense of regular investors.

The government’s intervention has made life more difficult for Mr Huang. He had to pare back his positions last year, particularly in bearish contracts, after authorities cracked down on what they viewed as excessive speculation in the stock index futures market and vowed to go after “malicious” short sellers.

Grateful investors

Still, none of that seems to have hurt Mr Huang’s knack for calling the markets. Cai Zhongyu, a retired electronics institute worker in Shanghai who has been following the trade recommendations dispensed by Mr Huang in online chat groups since 2009, said she made a 300 per cent return last year “all thanks to him”.

“He always got it right on the market direction,” said Ms Cai. “You have to admit that.”

Ms Cai was among more than 90 admirers of Mr Huang who travelled to the coastal city of Xiamen to hear him give trading tips and his market forecasts in Dec­ember. After an extraordinary 2015, his outlook for this year was decidedly more modest.

“I’ll just be following the market and do a few trades as it falls, like ants biting on a bone,” Mr Huang said. “If I get 5 to 6 per cent each time and end the year with 50 per cent to 60 per cent, I’d be happy.”

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