logo
Salisbury: Bad Vintage Assets Hurting Private Equity

Salisbury: Bad Vintage Assets Hurting Private Equity

Bloomberg05-06-2025
Julian Salisbury, Sixth Street Co-CIO, discusses the widespread prevalence of bad vintage assets in private equity leading to stock indigestion in the market. He joins Bloomberg's Dani Burger from day two of the SuperReturn Conference in Berlin. (Source: Bloomberg)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Apple is reportedly making more of its new iPhones in India instead of China
Apple is reportedly making more of its new iPhones in India instead of China

The Verge

time28 minutes ago

  • The Verge

Apple is reportedly making more of its new iPhones in India instead of China

Apple is manufacturing more of its iPhone 17 phones for the US in India instead of in China, and for the first time, the full lineup of new models will ship from India at launch, according to Bloomberg. The company is also working on a successor to the iPhone 16E that it plans to make in India, Bloomberg says. Apple has increasingly been moving iPhone production to India to reduce its dependence on manufacturing in China. The company already expects to pay $1.1 billion in tariffs for the current quarter, but Bloomberg reports that currently, Apple's exports of iPhones to the US from India are exempted from tariffs. That's despite the Trump administration's 50 percent tariff on many imports from India, and while analyst Patrick Moorhead move 'does dodge some tariffs,' he noted that iPhone subassemblies are still mostly produced in China then shipped to India for final assembly. Earlier this month, Apple announced a $100 billion investment in US manufacturing that builds on the $500 billion it announced earlier this year. Trump has claimed that companies committed to building products in the US would be exempt from future tariffs on imported chips. However, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CNBC on Tuesday morning that the administration plans to increase tariffs on India, saying it's a result of the country buying and selling Russian oil despite sanctions from the war in Ukraine. Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All by Jay Peters Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Apple Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All News Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Tech

Options Traders Brace for Big Tech Selloff With ‘Disaster' Puts
Options Traders Brace for Big Tech Selloff With ‘Disaster' Puts

Yahoo

time41 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Options Traders Brace for Big Tech Selloff With ‘Disaster' Puts

(Bloomberg) -- Options traders are increasingly nervous about a plunge in technology stocks in the coming weeks and are grabbing insurance to protect themselves from a wipeout. The tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 Index is up almost 40% since its early April plunge triggered by President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs. The rally has been propelled by big tech, with the Bloomberg Magnificent 7 Index — which contains the likes of Nvidia Corp., Meta Platforms Inc. and Microsoft Corp. — soaring nearly 50% since its April 8 bottom. Chicago Schools Seeks $1 Billion of Short-Term Debt as Cash Gone A Photographer's Pipe Dream: Capturing New York's Vast Water System A London Apartment Tower With Echoes of Victorian Rail and Ancient Rome Why New York City Has a Fleet of New EVs From a Dead Carmaker Princeton Plans New Budget Cuts as Pressure From Trump Builds The concern, however, is that those gains are hiding areas of weakness lurking beneath the market's surface. And there are potential triggers for a drop coming up, from Federal Reserve's Jackson Hole symposium starting in a few days to Nvidia's earnings next week. Traders are 'less concerned' about a 'normal run-of-the-mill pullback' and seem to be more worried about a repeat of the April selloff, said Jeff Jacobson, head of derivative strategy at 22V Research Group, who thinks a shallower dip is more likely. Traders are buying 'disaster' puts on the Invesco QQQ Trust Series 1 ETF, which tracks the Nasdaq 100 Index, Jacobson said. Put options give investors the right to sell the underlying security at a certain price, and are popular as a way of protecting against a market drop. A measure showing the difference between the cost of hedging against a sharp downturn and a smaller one is at an almost three-year high, Jacobson said. Fears of a bubble are mounting, as tech stocks follow a pattern that is 'surprisingly similar' to the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s, Torsten Slok, chief economist at Apollo Management, wrote in a note to clients on Monday. Meanwhile, Michael Hartnett, chief investment strategist at Bank of America Corp., has been warning of a bubble forming in risk assets since December and predicts that US stocks will drop after the Fed's Jackson Hole symposium ends on Friday. Myriad Risks 'The market's had such a big run,' Jacobson said. 'A myriad of things' could send big tech tumbling. For example, there are worries about the impact of artificial intelligence on software companies, which has helped push Salesforce Inc.'s share price down 27% this year. And the Magnificent 7 rally could come to an end if tariff-driven inflation forces the Fed to curtail interest rate cuts that the market has already priced in. 'It could be a rotation out of those the Mag Seven names into some of the other areas that have lagged,' Jacobson said. 'It could be 'sell the news' when you have Nvidia earnings in the next few weeks. We could even get a 'sell the news' out of Jackson Hole.' The elevated put skew indicates that traders are hedging against a repeat of the tariff tantrum in April, according to Jacobson. He sees that fear as overblown. While the Nasdaq 100 sank more than 20% from its Feb. 9 high to its April 8 low, that kind of move is extremely unusual. Over the last 18 months, the average selloff in the Nasdaq 100 has been around 12.5%, Jacobson said. To bet on a correction in the ETF, Jacobson suggests a number of trades including buying a put ratio spread, in which cost of insuring against a shallower drop is partially funded by selling insurance against a deeper, April-style plunge. Specifically, Jacobson encourages traders to buy $570 puts in QQQ that expire on Oct. 17, and that they fund the trade by selling twice as many $515 puts in QQQ. The trade should make money if the index falls by roughly 2% and no more than 11%, he said. The $515 level is the ETF's 200-day moving average, which he believes will act as a floor in the event of a pullback. Not everyone on Wall Street is convinced that investors should be shorting the best performing of the major US equity indexes over the last decade. JPMorgan Chase & Co. cross-asset strategists, for instance, suggest shorting the small-capitalization Russell 2000 Index and going long the Nasdaq 100. Jacobson, however, is more pessimistic about big tech's immediate future. 'Clearly, there's a possibility, right?' he asked rhetorically. 'You have just a, such a strong concentration in these names. It wouldn't take much.' Foreigners Are Buying US Homes Again While Americans Get Sidelined What Declining Cardboard Box Sales Tell Us About the US Economy Women's Earnings Never Really Recover After They Have Children Americans Are Getting Priced Out of Homeownership at Record Rates Yosemite Employee Fired After Flying Trans Pride Flag ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store