The article presents an interesting picture of the trader in his final days:
Brooding in his office overlooking Wall Street, Mr. Weinstein remained outwardly calm as markets went haywire, traders say. The value of his group's holdings of corporate bonds and loans began to slide as other investors, needing to raise money, sold such securities.
At the same time, trading in credit-default swaps was curtailed because market players were concerned about entering trades with banks that potentially could collapse. This left Mr. Weinstein's group increasingly unprotected against losses in corporate bonds and loans, because it used swaps to hedge those positions.
Mr. Weinstein wasn't alone. Similar positions held by banks and hedge funds across Wall Street fell apart amid the seismic dislocations after the Lehman collapse.
As prices of corporate bonds and loans slumped to new lows and stocks plunged too, Mr. Weinstein wanted to buy more swaps to protect his positions, traders say. He told traders that in such a trading environment, "the primary objective is to get as flat as possible to the market" -- not betting on either a rise or a fall -- according to a person familiar with the conversation.
But in contentious conference calls, risk managers at Deutsche Bank told Mr. Weinstein to scale back positions or sell them entirely, traders say. Mr. Weinstein's stock-trading desk was instructed to sell nearly every holding, effectively shutting it down.
Good reading, and presents some interesting, although not quite correct, perspectives on why the basis trade went from cash cow to guillotine in a span of 24 hours. And, by the way, we are kidding that Boaz will never get a job - Bill Ackman has said he would likely hire him in a heartbeat. Maybe Boaz can go and run the PSIV fund... We are hearing it has some PM openings and doesn't believe in diversification either. After all basis trades and Target calls are pretty much the same thing.
3 comments:
Yeah but Boaz Weinstein plays chess so well, let him start another fund.
The guy looks about 50. Heart attack in 5 years.
I never understood why being good at Chess would indicate great trading potential. Poker, I can see.
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