Apple 2.0

Covering the business that Steve Jobs built

How hedge funds could hurt Apple

November 3, 2008: 8:17 AM ET

There's an interesting and timely paragraph about Apple buried in the middle of Scott ("The Finance Professor") Rothbort's latest primer on hedge funds (Hedge Fund Liquidations: Five Things You Need to Know).

He's explaining how hedge fund investors -- technically, limited partners -- are only allowed to withdraw money on an quarterly or annual basis, which can result, when a fund is performing poorly, in a rush of redemptions that resembles a run on a bank.

To meet those redemption requests, a hedge fund leveraged 5 to 1 will have to sell at least $5 of investments to meet every $1 of redemptions. (And 5 to 1 is conservative; a hedge fund can, in theory, be almost infinitely leveraged.)

This is where Apple comes into Rothbort's primer:

"As redemptions tend to be clustered, the impact on individual stocks from hedge funds liquidating their holdings (to meet those redemptions) will be a magnified and concentrated hit on those stocks, and potentially the overall market.

"Since the hedge funds are more concerned about creating liquidity than preserving the integrity of their portfolios during a crisis, the higher priced stocks tend to get sold first. It is far easier to create $10,000,000 of cash by selling smaller amounts of a $200 stock (say Apple (AAPL) than larger amounts of a $25 stock (say Altria (MO)). And before you know it, that $200 stock has become a $100 stock. 'Classic' valuation is thrown out the window."(link)

Investors pulled a record $43 billion out of U.S. hedge funds in September, according to the Financial Times, a month in which Apple fell more than 60 points (36%), from $166 a share to $105.

What makes this timely?

Another run on the hedge funds could be just around the corner. Some experts anticipate a flood of redemption requests around Nov. 15, the notification deadline for investors who want to get their money out before the end of the year. (Most hedge funds insist that investors notify them of their intentions 45 to 65 days before the end of a quarter; see here. Last quarter's notification day was Aug. 15, and Apple got hammered from mid-August to early October.)

Apple investors, fasten your seatbelts. You could be in for a bumpy ride.

[Thanks to "cramar" at TMO's Apple Finance Board for the tip.]

Posted in: ,
Join the Conversation
About This Author
Philip Elmer-Dewitt
Philip Elmer-Dewitt
Editor, Apple 2.0, Fortune

Philip Elmer-DeWitt has been covering Apple since 1982, first for Time Magazine, and now on the Web for Fortune.com.

Email | @philiped | RSS
Featured Newsletters

Every morning, discover the companies, deals and trends in tech that are moving markets and making headlines.

Receive Fortune's newsletter on all the deals that matter, from Wall Street to Sand Hill Road. SUBSCRIBE

Covering the digital giants of Silicon Valley and beyond, an in-depth look at enterprise companies, and the startups disrupting them. Emailed twice weekly.

Anne Fisher answers career-related questions and offers helpful advice for business professionals.

Company Price Change % Change
Bank of America Corp... 7.02 0.04 0.57%
JPMorgan Chase and C... 33.49 -0.44 -1.30%
Oracle Corp 25.61 -0.64 -2.44%
General Electric Co 18.95 0.07 0.37%
Citigroup Inc 26.01 -0.40 -1.51%
Data as of May 18
Index Last Change % Change
Dow 12,369.38 -73.11 -0.59%
Nasdaq 2,778.79 -34.90 -1.24%
S&P 500 1,295.22 -9.64 -0.74%
Treasuries 1.70 0.00 0.00%
Data as of 2:48am ET
Most Popular
New York penthouse sells for a record $90 million
 
JPMorgan Chase loss only going to get worse
 
Nasdaq 'embarrassed' over Facebook trading issues - Reports
 
Facebook trading sets record IPO volume
 
Stocks: Storm clouds continue to gather over Greece
 
Powered by WordPress.com VIP.