This Is What Hedge Funds Bought And Sold In Q2: Full 13F Summary
This Is What Hedge Funds Bought And Sold In Q2: Full 13F Summary While we already covered what may have been the most boring 13F of the second quarter, namely that of Berkshire Hathaway which saw very few changes with Warren Buffett merely adding to a few legacy positions and trimming a few others (full breakdown here)… ... as well as the most interesting one, that from Tiger Global which confirmed that the so-called hedge fund was nothing more than a paper-hands retail investor, dumping most of its biggest holdings just as the market troughed, and leaving the world''s most overrated tech fund missing on all of the recent market upside... ... we also have had quite a few hedge funds inbetween. Courtesy of Bloomberg here are the highlights of the just concluded 13F seasons: Risk off: Chase Coleman’s Tiger Global Management, Dan Sundheim’s D1 Capital and Michael Burry’s Scion Asset Management were among firms that continued to offload equities in the period. Tiger’s aggregate exposure to stocks dropped by about 55% to $11.8 billion.
This Is What Hedge Funds Bought And Sold In Q2: Full 13F Summary
This Is What Hedge Funds Bought And Sold In Q2: Full 13F Summary While we already covered what may have been the most boring 13F of the second quarter, namely that of Berkshire Hathaway which saw very few changes with Warren Buffett merely adding to a few legacy positions and trimming a few others (full breakdown here)… ... as well as the most interesting one, that from Tiger Global which confirmed that the so-called hedge fund was nothing more than a paper-hands retail investor, dumping most of its biggest holdings just as the market troughed, and leaving the world''s most overrated tech fund missing on all of the recent market upside... ... we also have had quite a few hedge funds inbetween. Courtesy of Bloomberg here are the highlights of the just concluded 13F seasons: Risk off: Chase Coleman’s Tiger Global Management, Dan Sundheim’s D1 Capital and Michael Burry’s Scion Asset Management were among firms that continued to offload equities in the period. Tiger’s aggregate exposure to stocks dropped by about 55% to $11.8 billion.