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REPORT: Two Legendary Hedge Fund Managers Were Both Investors In InTrade

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Paul Tudor Jones

This is something we didn't know before about InTrade, the events betting site that announced yesterday that it was shutting down...

Legendary billionaire hedge fund managers Paul Tudor Jones and Stan Druckenmiller were both investors in Intrade as of 2011, the Financial Times reports citing audit documents. 

From the FT:

The documents also revealed that the company’s shareholders in 2011 included hedge fund managers Paul Tudor Jones and Stanley Druckenmiller, and a trust connected to Christopher Hehmeyer, the current chairman of the National Futures Association, a US regulatory body. None of the shareholders could be reached for comment yesterday.

Intrade, a popular Dublin-based internet betting exchange for things like the presidential election to the papal conclave, halted its operations and froze customer accounts yesterday after it discovered possible financial irregularities. 

It's not clear whether Druckenmiller or Jones remain shareholders.

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REPORT: InTrade Founder Failed To Report Millions He Got From The Company

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John Delaney Intrade

The FT's Arash Massoudi, Gregory Meyer and Jamie Smyth report InTrade founder John Delaney failed to adequately report $2.6 million he received from the company, citing documents the company recently filed.

Yesterday InTrade announced it was suspending all operations. 

Auditors flagged “significant financial irregularities” in payments made to Delaney, who died on Mount Everest in 2011, the FT says.

The documents also show Paul Tudor Jones and Stanley Druckenmiller were shareholders in the company as late as 2011 — as was a trust connected to Christopher Hehmeyer, the current chairman of the National Futures Association.

Read the full report on FT.com >

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Ken Langone Went On An Epic Paul Krugman Rant On Bloomberg TV

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Outspoken billionaire financier Ken Langone appeared Friday on Bloomberg TV to discuss generational theft — the idea that the old are stealing from the young to pay for entitlements and retirement.

Langone, 77, believes it. He told Eric Schatzker that "we're stealing from the young." He even said that the government should "start with me" in terms of where to cut entitlements for the elderly.

"If I had to pay for my own health insurance, that's okay. I can afford it ... by the way I think it's going to turn up that way with Obamacare."

His point was that everyone needs some skin in the game.

That's when Langone pulled a ... Langone. Bloomberg anchor Sarah Eisen took the other side of the argument, noting that economist Paul Krugman believes Americans needn't worry about the deficit.

Langone countered that while Krugman is brilliant, he doesn't know about profit margins or businessmen.

"The thing about 1% like me there's a limit. What's the limit 100% of my income. Unless you say now he's got no income let's go after his assets. We may get there ... The money either comes from taxes or other activities... or a willing and compliant Fed saying how many bars you got? $1 billion? Turn the presses on! This is simple stuff! My problem with the Krugmans of the world is that they're brilliant ... they just may be too brilliant ... Losing weight is not a very scientific endeavor you consume less calories than you burn you lose weight ... so let's stop all this crap with all of these high fallutin' thoughts and ideas. You know what happens to people their eyes glaze over, I don't know what the hell he's saying."

He went ont to say that he really respects investor Stanley Druckenmiller because he applies practical math to these problems, adding that if Krugman and Druckenmiller were to brawl it would be "TKO in about 5 seconds."

Watch a clip below:

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DRUCKENMILLER: The Commodity Situation Is Deadly, And The Aussie Dollar Will Come Down Hard

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Legendary hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller is presenting at the Sohn Investment Conference today.

His comments are quite bearish on the commodity complex.

Druckenmiller says the supply and demand situation in commodities is deadly (various commodity markets are dealing with supply gluts even as global growth is slowing), and he recommends shorting "commodity currencies"– like the Australian and Canadian dollars.

The last two years, Druckenmiller says, have shown that the commodity supercycle is over.

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A Big Idea In Stan Druckenmiller's Sohn Conference Presentation Is Playing Out In Markets As We Speak

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Stanley Druckenmiller

It's been about a month since the Sohn Investment Conference took place in New York City, and one hedge fund manager's presentation is already standing out to us — Stanley Druckenmiller's.

The Sohn Conference is known for attracting ideas from the biggest players in the world of investing, but their presentations vary in terms of precision. Some investors focus on a specific company (Bill Ackman's presentation was solely a long thesis for Procter and Gamble) while others tend to give their macro overview of markets and the world at large (like Jeff Gundlach).

Stanley Druckenmiller's presentation sat in a kind of middle ground between the two. His ideas were actionable, individual calls, but also quite prescient on a macro scale.

That said, (as many presenters mentioned when they had the floor) the investment ideas presented at Sohn aren't things that you're going to wake up and see running markets the day after the conference. They take time.

So we've been keeping some salient themes in mind, watching markets for some good calls etc., expecting results in a few months.

That's why one of Druckenmiller's salient themes won't get out of our heads. He was majorly bearish on China and commodities, and told listeners to short the Aussie dollar, and  that's being played out magnificently right now.

We've seen a ton of bad data from China since the Ira Sohn conference a month ago (remember PMI?), and according to Druckenmiller, that spells doom for commodities as well. The asset class enjoyed a brief respite from the sad end to its supercycle when China had a huge stimulus in 2008 — now that help isn't coming.

fin vix aussie dollarThat crunch on commodities and China has resulted in the beautiful execution of one of Druckemiller's most clear, actionable ideas — short the Aussie dollar. It has fallen 94 cents against the dollar.

And look at that ugly slump since May, when the conference took place — actually it's not really a slump, it's more of a dive.

A few of Druckenmiller's other ideas remain to be seen — he's short the market long term, thinks the end of QE will result in terror for U.S. markets, long Google (low exposure to China), and thinks the Bank of Japan is doing the right thing with its Abenomics stimulus. Obviously, all those things are up for debate.

But when we see something work, we have to say something.

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Stan Druckenmiller On Emerging Markets, Investing, And The China Issue People Aren't Talking About Enough

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Stanley DruckenmillerFrom Goldman Sachs

Stan Druckenmiller is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Duquesne Family Office. He founded Duquesne Capital Management in 1981, which he ran until he closed the firm in 2010. Previously, he was a Managing Director at Soros Fund Management, where he served as Lead Portfolio Manager of the Quantum Fund and Chief Investment Officer of Soros

Interview with Stan Druckenmiller

Hugo Scott-Gall: What are the risks of investing in China that are not well understood in your view?

Stan Druckenmiller: The growth in credit at a time when GDP growth is slowing is a problem for China. And I think this is the 2009-11 stimulus coming back to bite. I understand that it had to be done to fund entrepreneurs and the private sector, but it’s easier said than done if you’re channelling funds through local government investment vehicles. I’m a believer in markets. A few men sitting around a table and deciding how to allocate capital goes against everything I’ve ever believed. Not only are they not great at capital allocation, such an exercise also needs to deal with a lack of property rights and corruption. In essence, the frantic stimulus China put together at the end of 2008 sowed the seeds of slower growth in the future by crowding out more productive investments. And now, the system’s building enough leverage and misallocation of resources to warrant risks of a financial crisis, but the timing of that is still uncertain in my mind. What we’ve seen in China since 2009 is similar to what happened in the US in 2005, in terms of credit growth outpacing economic growth.

I think ageing demographics is a bigger issue in China than people think. And the problems it creates should be become evident as early as 2016.

You also need to keep in mind that for China to grow and evolve further, it will need to compete with a more innovative Korea and now a more competitive Japan. I don’t think China can do that with where its exchange rate is today. I think productivity is a key concern too. And I think that could be one of the reasons why the US has been so supportive of Abenomics.

People mention lack of infrastructure as a constraint. But when I go over there, it looks like they have a lot of infrastructure. It seems ahead of the population, not behind. I see expensive apartments in empty cities that 300 mn rural Chinese are expected to migrate to.  That looks very unbalanced to me. Nobody’s ever had investment to GDP at 47%. Japan and Korea peaked at 36%-38%, so as a result I think capacity is way ahead of demand in some areas in China.

Hugo Scott-Gall: If China slows its fixed asset investment, will that have a knock on effect for its commodities demand and thus commodity prices?

Stan Druckenmiller: When I started in 1976, I was taught by my mentor that when cash flow rises equities go up. But commodities are driven by the cost of extraction 90% of the time, and over the long run, technology makes extraction cheaper, pushing the cost curve down and with it commodity prices. But that hasn’t always worked, if I’d followed that advice over the past few decades, I’d be in trouble.

About five years ago, I bought into the peak oil thesis. But then, along comes shale oil and shale technology, reminding me of what my old mentor said 35 years ago. Now I’ve come to think that the oil price is not as vulnerable to China slowing down as it is to ongoing shale supply growth. I regard the ramp up in investment by China as a 10-year aberration, making the last two years more normal and more representative than the previous decade.

I do think China is serious about rebalancing, which means infrastructure investment is going to slow. And obviously, there's been a huge ramp-up in supply around the world in response to the 2009-11 stimulus, which in my view is a massive misread by the suppliers of these commodities. So that’s not good for commodity prices. And then you have innovation. Can technology progress in iron ore and copper, the way it has with shale energy? My guess is it will.

If you look at food, there’s now technology that allows seeds to be drought-proof and disease proof. Yes, there is a demand-supply argument for food prices rising, but the impact of technology on food supply is greater than you think. On the other hand, we are using up more and more good arable land to build cities in China and there is a water problem in China too.

Hugo Scott-Gall: Do you think we underestimate the role of innovation in resolving these global constraints?

Stan Druckenmiller: Even with all the progress we have made in technology in the recent past, I think we are only scratching the surface in terms of innovation. We haven’t seen half of the practical applications of big new technologies yet. And the cost of these technologies will come down too, whether it’s robotics or driverless cars. That has to provide a productivity boost.

But there is a downside to technology-driven productivity surges too. There is improved efficiency, but at the cost of fewer jobs. I think the impact of technology on manufacturing jobs is easy to overlook because of the huge surge in services jobs. But we’re now at a point where the impact of technology is hitting the services sectors too. And not everyone understands this. I recently brought up the possibility of driverless auto technology resulting in zero jobs for truck drivers within the next 20 years and there were gasps of disbelief from the audience of investors. When I mentioned it to a high-tech company CEO from Silicon Valley a few days later, his response was exactly the opposite. The point is that the problem with a tech-driven productivity surge is that the benefits of that are going to accrue to a smaller, narrower group. Already, computer engineers have benefitted from computing and the internet a lot more than the broader population.

You could draw similar conclusions on the impact of technology and automation on investing. I believe that good investors are successful not  because of their IQ, but because they have an investing discipline. But, what is more disciplined than a machine? A well-researched machine can make many average investors redundant, leaving behind only the really good human investors with exceptional intuition and skill. And what happens when machines really take over investing? Do the markets get really efficient? Or will there be competing systems trying to outdo each other? All of this is depressing because there won’t much left to do for humans once machines start doing more and more.

If machines do everything well, including allocating capital and resources efficiently, can that be deflationary, can that eliminate poverty? I don’t know. It’s hard to be very optimistic if you look at how humans have behaved historically. All in all, I don’t think robots and greater automation can bring about a utopian world as I imagined it would as a kid 50 years ago.

Hugo Scott-Gall: If you combine the prospect of fewer jobs with an ageing population, it doesn’t look very good for many economies...

Stan Druckenmiller: Apart from India, most of the other major economies have worsening demographics to worry about. It’s a big problem for the US too, especially given that relative to many other economies, including Japan, its fiscal gap is much wider. All in all, I don’t think robots and greater automation can bring about a utopian world as I imagined it would as a kid 50 years ago.

You can look at the US debt stock in a few different ways. The official estimate of the total debt may be US$11 tn, but if you include what the Fed has bought (which you should), then the number if closer to US$16 tn. But a better measure of US debt would include some of the off balance sheet items. Laurence Kotlikoff, who is one of the top economists in his field of generational accounting, estimates the present value of US debt including what has been promised to senior citizens, adjusted for the projected tax revenues and the fiscal gap, to be about US$211 tn. That’s staggering.

The US needs to resolve its debt problem politically, otherwise it is headed towards default. I believe the estimates suggest that the US needs to raise all taxes by about 64% in order to be able to support its older population. That’s raising payroll, capital, dividends and income taxes by 64%. The other option is to cut all government spending by 40%. Neither one is a viable option and a combination is not easy either. In 20 years, those numbers will become even tougher. The US will need to raise taxes by 75% or cut spending by 46%.

There has been vigourous debate on the veracity of Rogoff and Reinhart’s research on the consequences of countries exceeding 90% debt-to-GDP. But it doesn’t take away from the fact that historically, such levels of indebtedness has resulted in extreme implications.  Countries tend to go into a full-blown monetisation or a default or inflation on average 23 years after they cross the 90% threshold according to their research. So these debt levels are less relevant for you and me today, but will be extremely crucial for our children. If we continue to borrow and spend like we do now, this can become a serious problem in 15 years.

If machines do everything well, including allocating capital and resources efficiently, can that be deflationary, can that eliminate poverty? I don’t  know.

I understood the need for QE1 because the US economy faced a potential meltdown then. But further easing brings problems of its own, that only come to light in hindsight. All that easing and prolonged negative real interest rates have gone beyond resolving the core issues the economy faced and has led to re-leveraging. I’m not worried about inflation as much as misallocation of investment.

Another consequence of today’s monetary policy is that the US government is not getting any price signals. In any other society, at some point in the next 15-20 years, the markets will give a price signal and the politicians will need to respond. But currently, there is no such impetus for politicians to act. What adds to the problem is that young Americans don't vote. Old people not only vote, but also have incredibly powerful lobbying groups behind them. Entitlements in 1960 were 28% of government outlays, today it is 67%. And the baby boomers have only now begun to retire. Another debate is that this is a huge reason to accelerate immigration, but current policy is moving in the opposite direction. But even with immigration, the US needs to fix this pay-as-you-go system or the consequences could be quite drastic.

Hugo Scott-Gall: Do you think investing is becoming harder now with more government intervention and regulation interfering with market price signals?

Stan Druckenmiller: It has become harder for me, because the importance of my skills is receding. Part of my advantage, is that my strength is economic forecasting, but that only works in free markets, when markets are smarter than people. That’s how I started. I watched the stock market, how equities reacted to change in levels of economic activity and I could understand how price signals worked and how to forecast them. Today, all these price signals are compromised and I’m seriously questioning whether I have any competitive advantage left.

Ten years ago, if the stock market had done what it has just done now, I could practically guarantee you that growth was going to accelerate. Now, it's a possibility, but I would rather say that the market is rigged and people are chasing these assets, without growth necessarily backing confidence. It's not predicting anything the way it used to and that really makes me reconsider my ability to generate superior returns. If the most important price in the most important economy in the world is being rigged, and everything else is priced off it, what am I supposed to read into other price movements?

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Stan Druckenmiller Gave A Startlingly Blunt Reason For Why Hedge Fund Managers Don't Like Bernanke

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stanley druckenmiller

It's no secret that a lot of hedge fund managers on Wall Street have no love for Ben Bernanke or his monetary policy.  Journalists, economists and pundits have mused on the reason why more times than anyone can count.

For their part, hedge fund managers usually say that they fear Bernanke's policies will lead to rampant inflation — a massive problem in the United States in the 1970s when many of them were coming of age.

That danger, however, remains to be seen in our economy as, in fact, deflation continues to be a risk.

So why do hedge fund managers hate Ben Bernanke? In an interview with Goldman Sachs, Stan Druckenmiller, a known Bernanke detractor gave a candid explanation we never though we'd hear from a hedge fund manager.

He was answering a question about whether or not investing had become more difficult in recent years (via ZeroHedge):

It has become harder for me, because the importance of my skills is receding. Part of my advantage, is that my strength is economic forecasting, but that only works in free markets, when markets are smarter than people. That’s how I started. I watched the stock market, how equities reacted to change in levels of economic activity and I could understand how price signals worked and how to forecast them. Today, all these price signals are compromised and I’m seriously questioning whether I have any competitive advantage left.

Ten years ago, if the stock market had done what it has just done now, I could practically guarantee you that growth was going to accelerate. Now, it's a possibility, but I would rather say that the market is rigged and people are chasing these assets, without growth necessarily backing confidence. It's not predicting anything the way it used to and that really makes me reconsider my ability to generate superior returns. If the most important price in the most important economy in the world is being rigged, and everything else is priced off it, what am I supposed to read into other price movements?

In short, Stan Druckenmiller is now in a world he doesn't recognize, and it's making him feel useless.

Earlier in the interview he acknowledged that he "understood the need for QE1 because the U.S. economy faced a potential meltdown." That implies that the precarious, low-growth situation we're in now isn't a good enough reason (in Druckenmiller's eyes) to continue a policy that makes him and many of his peers feel like aliens in their own home.

It is, however, good enough for Japan. Druckenmiller has called Abenomics "appropriate."

The problem with that is simple — it goes against all the "best advice" and the "golden rules" and the maxims traders have passed down about the market for years.

You've heard them all: "Adapt or die.""Have an unquenchable thirst for knowledge.""Don't trade on emotions or ideology."

Those aren't all direct quotes, but you get the picture. Hedge fund managers aren't supposed to be upset about market factors they can't control, even if those factors are controlled by a person. They're supposed to understand the market that exists and come up with the appropriate strategy.

Wall Street is not a 'shoulda, coulda, woulda,' kind of place.

NOW: Druckenmiller on emerging markets, investing, and the China issue people aren't talking about enough

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STAN DRUCKENMILLER: I Believe The Market Is Topping And 'I'm Lost' Right Now

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stanley druckenmiller

Legendary hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller was on Bloomberg TV moments ago talking about the market.

Druckenmiller, the founder of Duquesne Capital (now a family office hedge fund), is usually press shy.  He made the TV appearance to talk about the issue of generational theft that he's been highlighting for the past several months. 

As for the markets, the former portfolio manager for George Soros' Quantum Fund says that he's "lost." 

Druckenmiller told Bloomberg TV that he's sitting and waiting citing the decision for the next Fed Chairman, QE and Syria.  He noted that the next Fed Chair matters. 

"I like to be patient and then go a little crazy. I just don't see anything right now," he said.   

Druckenmiller said he had a few big decisions earlier this year, but has pared those back.  He said he's long some Japanese equities and short some Yen.  He said he doesn't have any big positions right now. 

"Ok, so my guess is, and I believe the market is topping. The stock market predicted seven out of the last three recessions; I predicted seven out of the last three bear markets. I started in a bear market, so I have a bearish bias. Where I am on the market is if you gave me a stock I really like, I will buy it. If you give me a stock I really hate, I’ll short it. In terms of having some big position, long or short idea, or some exposure to the stock market right now, I am lost. I don’t play when I am lost. I know in the future I won’t be lost," he told Bloomberg TV. 

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Hedge Funder Stan Druckenmiller Wants Every Young Person In America To See These Charts About How They're Getting Screwed

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Stan Druckenmiller

Iconic hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller, the founder of Duquesne Capital Management, has been vocal for the past several months about the issue of generational theft. 

Druckenmiller, who accurately called the housing crisis, has said he sees another "storm" coming due to entitlement transfer payments. Entitlements are things like Social Security and Medicare that primary go to older, retired workers.

The billionaire fund manager believes that seniors in this country are essentially stealing from the young via these entitlement transfers. What's more is he thinks it could result in a crisis even more devastating than 2008.   

Druckenmiller, 60, will be visiting various college campuses this fall to talk about this issue with the younger population. We found a video of his presentation he gave at his alma mater Bowdoin College in Maine a few months ago.   

Druckenmiller told the Bowdoin students that he started worrying back in 1994. 

"The reason was because...it was demographics because I knew that in 2011 the 'Baby Boomers'...the front end was going to turn 65 and you were going to have this huge surge in entitlement payments because again the biggest buckets of entitlements are for the elderly." 

He also shared 16 charts with the students and explained why it's such a pressing matter that should be addressed now. We've included his charts and commentary in the slides that follow. 

This chart shows Federal Entitlement Transfers as a percentage of Federal Budget Outlays. Back in 1960, they were 28%. In the last two years, they're up to 68%.

via Bowdoin College 



This chart is just Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security. Since 1970, the benefits per 'oldster' have grown from 41% to 72%.

via Bowdoin College 




Druckenmiller says the problem is the 'Baby Boomers' moving into retirement. That population is about to explode, he says. He points out that the old now consume a lot more in their 70s than they did in their 20s.

via Bowdoin College 




See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Stan Druckenmiller Says Obama Can Only Negotiate In Good Faith 'With A Gun To His Head'

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Stan Druckenmiller

Billionaire hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller, the founder of Duquesne Capital, ripped into President Obama over the debt ceiling talks and the government shutdown during an interview with the Wall Street Journal's James Freeman. 

From the WSJ: 

Not that Mr. Druckenmiller endorsed the most recent Republican strategy. "I thought tying ObamaCare to the debt ceiling was nutty," he says, and I can confirm that he was saying so for weeks before the denouement.

But he adds that "I did not think it would be nutty to tie entitlements to the debt ceiling because there's a massive long-term problem. And this president, despite what he says, has shown time and time again that he needs a gun at his head to negotiate in good faith. All this talk about, 'I won't negotiate with a gun at my head.' OK, you've been president for five years."

His voice rising now, Mr. Druckenmiller pounds his fist on the conference table. "Show me, President Obama, when the period was when you initiated budget discussions without a gun at your head."

Open Secrets shows that Druckenmiller has donated to Republicans this year: 

DRUCKENMILLER, STANLEY F MR
NEW YORK,NY 10019
DUQUESNE FAMILY OFFICE LLC3/29/2013$30,800National Republican Congressional Cmte
DRUCKENMILLER, STANLEY F
NEW YORK,NY 10019
DUQUESNE FAMILY OFFICE LLC1/24/2013$10,000Seventh District Republican Cmte
DRUCKENMILLER, STANLEY
NEW YORK,NY 10019
DUQUESNE FAMILY OFFICE LLC1/24/2013$5,000Every Republican is Crucial PAC
DRUCKENMILLER, STANLEY MR
NEW YORK,NY 10019
DUQUESNE FAMILY OFFICE LLC1/24/2013$2,500Cantor, Eric
DRUCKENMILLER, STANLEY MR
NEW YORK,NY 10019
DUQUESNE FAMILY OFFICE LLC1/24/2013$2,500Cantor, Eric

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DRUCKENMILLER: 'I'm A 60-Year-Old Washed Up Money Manager'

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stanley druckenmiller

This weekend Stan Druckenmiller sat down with the WSJ to talk about his continued crusade for entitlement reform.

The legendary hedge fund manager has been visiting schools from Maine to California, encouraging kids to start a revolution to change the way the country spends on the future.

The fact that he's doing this at all is strange — what's stranger, at least for a Wall Streeter, is how he talks about it.

From WSJ:

Mr. Druckenmiller describes the reaction of students: "The biggest question I got was, 'How do we start a movement?' And my answer was 'I'm a 60-year-old washed-up money manager. I don't know how to start a movement. That's your job. But we did it in Vietnam without Twitter and without Facebook and without any social media. That's your job.' But the enthusiasm—they get it."

In an interview with Goldman Sachs earlier this year, Druckenmiller sounded equally futile about his place in an easy-money, QE market. He, like a lot of hedge fund managers, has been critical of Fed Chair Ben Bernanke's policies.

Unlike other hedge fund managers, though, he's open about his own feelings of inadequacy because of those policies.

It has become harder for me, because the importance of my skills is receding. Part of my advantage, is that my strength is economic forecasting, but that only works in free markets, when markets are smarter than people....

It's not predicting anything the way it used to and that really makes me reconsider my ability to generate superior returns. If the most important price in the most important economy in the world is being rigged, and everything else is priced off it, what am I supposed to read into other price movements?

Druckenmiller told the WSJ that he's been shocked at the positive reception he's gotten from students around the country. Hopefully that's reinvigorating him.

It'd be nice to hear him sound like he's got a little spring in his step.

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DRUCKENMILLER: Google Has The 'Greatest Business Model' In America And Larry Page Is 'This Generation's Thomas Edison' (GOOG)

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Stanley Druckenmiller

Stanley Druckenmiller, the billionaire manager of Duquesne Capital (now a family office), told CNBC that his largest investment position right now is Google. 

Druckenmiller, who previously had a reputation for being press shy, told CNBC today that he added a little more to his Google position following the tech giant's third-quarter earnings results. 

He touted Google for having the "greatest business model in American business."  He also said that Larry Page, the company's CEO, is "this generation's Thomas Edison." 

Right now, Druckenmiller says he sees the stock as "really well priced."

He added that you don't know what else they're going to come up with noting that they have the Google Car, and Google Glass. 

Back in September, Druckenmiller told Bloomberg TV's Stephanie Ruhle that he was "lost" in this market. He said that if he found a stock he really liked that he would buy it, or one that he really hated he would short it. 

Well, it looks like Google has been one idea working out for him.

Google's stock has been on a tear over the past six months.  It recently broke the $1,000 range and it's now trading at about $1,034 per share. 

Druckenmiller got in the stock back in May. Check out the chart:

google stock

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Now Kyle Bass And Stan Druckenmiller Have Gone Long Herbalife's Stock

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Kyle Bass

Texan hedge fund manager Kyle Bass has piled into the Herbalife trade. 

During the third quarter ended September 30, Hayman Capital Management held 436,371 shares of Herbalife, according to a 13F filing.  The fund also had 1,300,000 in call options and 500,000 in puts, the filing shows. 

Hedge fund manager Stan Druckenmiller, who runs family office Duquesne, also got into Herbalife in Q3.  He bought a little over 79,000 shares, his fund's 13F filing shows. 

Herbalife is a multi-level marketing company that sells nutrition products. The company's stock has been at the center of a huge hedge fund war. 

Late last year, Bill Ackman, who runs Pershing Square, publicly declared he's shorting $1 billion worth of the stock with a price target of $0.  Ackman believes the company is a "pyramid scheme" that targets lower income people, particularly from the Hispanic population. 

After Ackman announced his short, a bunch of hedge fund managers, most notably his arch-nemesis Carl Icahn, bet against him.  Icahn said on CNBC that he thinks Ackman will be the victim of the "mother of all short squeezes." 

Hedge fund managers George Soros and Richard Perry are both long Herbalife.

Daniel Loeb of Third Point was long during the first quarter. He called Ackman's pyramid scheme claims "preposterous" in a letter to investors.  Loeb exited Herbalife after a few weeks for a nice profit. 

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BILLIONAIRE HEDGE FUND MANAGER: 'Chris Christie Is A Once-In-A-Generation Leader'

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Stan Druckenmiller

Billionaire hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller, the founder of Duquesne Capital Management, is still supporting Gov. Chris Christie despite the whole "Bridgegate" debacle.

Druckenmiller told Bloomberg TV's Stephanie Ruhle that Christie is a "once-in-a-generation leader" and that he admires him.  

"The country thirsts for a great leader. A leader's actions in crisis are revealing," Druckenmiller told Bloomberg TV's Stephanie Ruhle. 

"Governor Christie's actions yesterday reinforces my admiration for him.  I believe Chris Christie is a once-in-a-generation leader.  He has long demonstrated that leadership on policy.  And he is showing essential executive skills as a manager: ensuring accountability and taking responsibility." 

Emails and text messages published this week showed that a Christie aide knew about a controversial plan to close two traffic lanes on the George Washington Bridge back in September.  It was believed that the traffic lanes were shut down in an effort to punish Fort Lee's Mayor Mark Sokolich (D) because he didn't endorse him for re-election. 

Christie apologized during a press conference yesterday saying he was "embarrassed and humiliated." He also said he fired Bridget Anne Kelly, the deputy chief of staff, who was involved in those email discussions with a couple Port Authority officials.

A bunch Republican hedge funders and bankers we spoke to considered the whole "Bridgegate" scandal to be a non-event. Many of them plan to support him if he decides to run for president in 2016.

Here's the Bloomberg clip: 

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DRUCKENMILLER: Every Ounce Of Intuition In My Body Tells Me The Fed Has Gone Too Far

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Stan Druckenmiller

Iconic hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller, the founder of Duquesne Capital Management, skewered the Federal Reserve at the CNBC Delivering Alpha conference. 

He says today's Federal Reserve policy is as  "baffling" as he's ever seen. 

Druckenmiller said that the current Fed policy "makes no sense from a risk/reward perspective" and that it will "end badly." 

He doesn't see it being like 2008 or 2009, though, because it's "not systemic." 

Druckenmiller explained that it's textbook to use monetary policy after a financial crisis to repair balance sheets. 

However, Druckenmiller pointed out that the labor market has "largely healed," industrial production is at a new high, and that retail sales have normalized.

He also compared the U.S. CPI to Japan's Core CPI. He said there's "no similarity whatsoever" to Japan's deflation and that it's time to move on from that argument. 

"If you landed from Mars and saw the five charts I just showed, would you understand the Fed's actions?" he asked.

Druckenmiller said that he really hopes he's "wrong," but thinks the Fed's policy will have bad effects. 

"I made a living analyzing the future, not the past. The Fed's monetary experiment will be more disruptive down the road than anticipated," Druckenmiller said.

He continued: "Every ounce of intuition in my body is that the potential costs have crossed the potential benefits in Fed policies."

"I don't know what's in the Fed's forecasting record that allows them to make such a bet." 

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The Billionaires Are All Quietly Preparing For The Stock Market To Plunge

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george soros"The stock market is at an all-time, but economic activity is not at an all-time," explains billionaire investor Sam Zell to CNBC on Thursday morning, adding that, "every company that's missed has missed on the revenue side, which is a reflection that there's a demand issue; and when you got a demand issue it's hard to imagine the stock market at an all-time high." Zell said he was being very cautious adding to stocks and cutting some positions because "I don't remember any time in my career where there have been as many wildcards floating out there that have the potential to be very significant and alter people's thinking." Zell also discussed his view on Obama's Fed encouraging disparity and on tax inversions, but concludes, rather ominously, "this is the first time I ever remember where having cash isn't such a terrible thing." Zell's calls should not be shocking following George Soros. Stan Druckenmiller, and Carl Icahn's warnings that there is trouble ahead.


Billionaire 1: Sam Zell

On Stocks and reality...

"People have no place else to put their money, and the stock market is getting more than its share. It's very likely that something has to give here."

"I don't remember any time in my career where there have been as many wildcards floating out there that have the potential to be very significant and alter people's thinking," he said. "If there's a change in confidence or some international event that changes the dynamics, people could in effect take a different position with reference to the market."

"It's almost every company that's missed has missed on the revenue side, which is a reflection that there's a demand issue," he said. "When you got a demand issue it's hard to imagine the stock market at an all-time high."

He also lamented about how difficult it is to call a market top. "If you're wrong on when, that's a problem." His answer: "You got to tiptoe ... and find the right balance."

"This is the first time I ever remember where having cash isn't such a terrible thing, despite the fact that interest rates are as low as they are," he added.

On Obama and inequality...

"Part of the impact of these very, very low interest rates is that we've creating this disparity. The wealthy are benefiting from government policy and the nonwealthy aren't," he continued. "So we have a president who says we've got to fight this disparity and we have a Fed who's encouraging it every day."

On Tax Inversion...

"This is both legal and accepted. If the government doesn't like the result, change the law," he said. "You have to have a rational tax policy." He said the top tax rate should be changed and the U.S. should not tax worldwide income.

Zell also said it's unfortunate that "this inversion thing has been captured as a political, electioneering item."

Source: CNBC

* * *

Billionaire 2: George Soros

Soros has once again increased his total SPY Put to a new record high of $2.2 billion, or nearly double the previous all-time high, and a whopping 17% of his total AUM.

*  *  *

Carl IcahnBillionaire 3: Carl Icahn

Ironically, Carl Icahn — poster-child of the leveraged financial engineering that has overtaken U.S. equity markets on the back of Central Bank largesse — told CNBC that he was"very nervous" about US equity markets. Reflecting on Yellen's apparent cluelessness of the consequences of her actions, and fearful of the build of derivative positions, Icahn says he's "worried" because if Yellen does not understand the end-game, then "there's no argument — you have to worry about the excessive printing of money!"

*  *  *

Stan DruckenmillerBillionaire 4: Stan Druckenmiller

Simply put, Druckenmiller concludes, rather ominously: "I am fearful that today our obsession with what will happen to markets and the economy in the near term is causing us to misjudge the accumulation of much greater long-term risks to our economy."

*  *  *

And here the BIS explains broken markets so easily, even a Janet Yellen can get it:

Financial markets have been exuberant over the past year, [...] dancing mainly to the tune of central bank decisions. Volatility in equity, fixed income and foreign exchange markets has sagged to historical lows. Obviously, market participants are pricing in hardly any risks.

Growth has picked up, but long-term prospects are not that bright. Financial markets are euphoric, but progress in strengthening banks’ balance sheets has been uneven and private debt keeps growing. Macroeconomic policy has little room for maneuver to deal with any untoward surprises that might be sprung, including a normal recession.

*  *  *

So now we have a quorum of billionaires and the BIS all flashing warning signals, which can mean only one thing: stocks are undervalued so buy, buy, buy ...


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Stanley Druckenmiller Nailed The Biggest Problem Facing IBM (IBM)

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stanley druckenmiller

Back in July, we highlighted comments from hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller, who called IBM the "poster child" for what was wrong with modern corporate behavior. 

Druckenmiller said IBM's financial-engineering practices, which include tripling its debt to repurchase stock, were exactly what had been wrong with the economic recovery.

But there was something else Druckenmiller nailed that is an even bigger problem for Big Blue: revenue is falling.

In Druckenmiller's comments back in July, he said that despite a stock price that had, to that point, risen more than 50% since the 2008 stock market bottom, IBM's sales were identical to what they were six years ago. 

And on Monday morning, it got worse, as IBM reported earnings that declined 4% year-over-year to $22.4 billion. 

In morning trade on Monday, shares of IBM were down about 7%. 

According to data from Yahoo Finance, Wall Street expects IBM's annual revenue in its fiscal-year 2014, which ends in December, to decline 2.3% to $97.4 billion. Those expectations are not yet adjusted for Monday's results, which disappointed by about $1 billion, so the Street's annual expectations are likely to be pared further. 

And comments from IBM CEO Ginni Rometty certainly didn't do much to engender a great deal of confidence. "We saw a marked slowdown in September in client buying behavior," Rometty said, "and our results also point to the unprecedented pace of change in our industry." 

Overall, Druckenmiller's comments were in the spirit of highlighting the problems he believed had been created by Fed policy, in particular thwarting capital spending and encouraging companies to engage in financial engineering rather than to invest in their business. 

At the end of September, IBM had $1.4 billion remaining on its share-repurchase authorization.

The company said it expected to request an additional repurchase program at its October board meeting.

SEE ALSO: This Is The Scariest Sentence From IBM's Earnings Announcement

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PAUL TUDOR JONES: Commodities Will Be Ugly Until At Least 2020

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Paul Tudor Jones 60 Minutes

Commodity prices have been falling around the world, and Paul Tudor Jones II thinks this trend will play out through 2020.

On Monday, the legendary macro trader was interviewed by another legend, Stanley Druckenmiller, at the Robin Hood Investors Conference.

The conference, which is stacked with hedge fund heavyweights, is off limits to the press. We have a source inside who was kind enough to share his notes from Monday evening's panel.

According to our source's notes, Jones says we are in the downturn for the current commodities cycle. Having reached the peak of the cycle a few years ago, we are still heading down to the bottom.

Jones said these commodity cycles run in roughly 30-year cycles between peaks — 1999 was a valley, and April 2011 was the peak. He said this cycle would play out through the downside through 2020 or so but would be net positive for the US economy.  

Jones also touched on other macro topics during the discussion. 

Jones talked about deleveraging in China and how that would be negative for the financial sector as well as commodities there. He basically said that there was a credit bubble and that the "the piper will be paid and the bubble will burst."

He said in about 2029 the US will breach Greek debt levels, according to our source.

He also talked about Japan and Japanese Government Bonds, which are up over 30% with extremely low trading volume. He's wondering when the yields will pop. 

Later in the panel, Jones said the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan would keep cutting rates. He said the yen needed to depreciate 15% per year to increase inflation 1% to 1.5%.

His trade is to get long the dollar versus the yen. According to our source's notes, the dollar rally versus other currencies may have run its course.

The panel fell on the anniversary of Black Monday — a market crash event that Jones famously predicted back in 1987 and that netted him millions.

According to our source's notes, Druckenmiller asked Jones about the similarities between 1987 and what's going on now. Jones said the 1987 crash was derivative inspired. The S&P futures were down 33% before the open on that Monday.

He also said that 1987 was dissimilar to what's going on now. He said we have a bubble now, and he's not sure whether it's in the stock market, according to our source's notes. 

As for last week's market activity, Jones said that on Thursday we saw a five standard deviation (that's a volatility measure) kind of movement in one day. He said we would see this kind of volatility in the future.

Speaking of the volatility of the past two to three weeks, he said that was due to position clearing and that it was similar to October 1998. (Our source pointed out that's when the Long-Term Capital Management event happened. Jones didn't explicitly say that, though.) 

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3 of the world's most powerful money managers are saying some scary things about the world

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Stan Druckenmiller

A month or so ago, I was struck by Ray Dalio’s comments at Davos. He seemed fairly concerned and the major media outlets didn’t really pick it up.

“It’s the end of the supercycle. It’s the end of the great debt cycle.” -Ray Dalio

What does this mean? I think the simplest explanation is that over the past several decades we’ve gone from a nation of savers who paid cash for things including homes and cars to a nation of spenders who use debt like mortgages, car loans and credit cards to pay for things.

And it’s not just on the consumer level. It’s also happened at the corporate level.

“Corporate debt was $3.5 trillion– in 2007, arguably a period and– many would describe as bubbly. It’s 7 trillion now. So it’s gone from 3.5 trillion to 7 trillion. As you know, most of that mix has been in more highly leveraged stuff, Covenant-Lite loans– high yield, that’s where the majority of the rise has been. And if you look at corporations have been using it for, it’s all financial engineering.” -Stan Druckenmiller

Government debt has also grown to multiples of GDP around the world. But it can’t keep growing forever.

“In the past 20 to 30 years, credit has grown to such an extreme globally that debt levels and the ability to service that debt are at risk, relative to the private investment world. Why doesn’t the debt supercycle keep expanding? Because there are limits.” -Bill Gross

The debt boom over the past few decades has been a big economic stimulant. It reminds me of the steroids era in baseball. You take a great player, put him on the juice and he becomes a record-breaking home run machine.

ray dalioBut what happens when he comes off the juice? Have you seen a picture of Mark McGuire or Sammy Sosa lately? They are shadows of their former selves. Now that rates are zero and everyone has borrowed as much as they possibly can debt is no longer the super-stimulant it once was.

“The process of lowering interest rates causing higher levels of debt, debt service and spending, I think is coming to an end.” – Ray Dalio

The steroid era is over. So what are the implications for the economy and the markets?

“The implications are much lower growth, less inflation, lower interest rates, and less profit growth.” -Bill Gross

These are all symptoms that we’ve already witnessed since the financial crisis, right? Slower economic growth has been partially masked by rising asset prices and the wealth effect. Slower profit growth has been masked by the “financial engineering” Druck mentioned above. But that doesn’t change the fact that we are now facing a post-steroid era for the economy.

“We brought consumption forward and issued one giant credit card for the past 30 years. Now the bill is coming due. Investors need to get used to low returns, and low growth, inflation, and interest rates for a long time.” -Bill Gross

Bill GrossWhat’s probably most troublesome about the whole situation is that now that rates are zero or negative, debt levels have reached their maximum capacity and asset prices are already inflated (and spreads flattened), central banks no longer have the ability to ameliorate an economic slowdown by easing monetary policy.

“Central banks have largely lost their power to ease… We now have a situation in which we have largely no spreads and so as a result the transmission mechanism of monetary policy will be less effective. This is a big thing… So I worry on the downside ’cause the downside will come.” -Ray Dalio

With corporate debt levels twice what they were before the financial crisis, the covenants on much of that debt weaker than ever before and liquidity in the bond market disappearing, the next downturn could present a unique challenge for the Fed. And their traditional tool to address these sorts of challenges is now essentially impotent. No wonder Dalio is worried.

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STAN DRUCKENMILLER: The only way to win the hedge fund game is by being a 'pig'

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Stan DruckenmillerForget portfolio diversification.

Legendary hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller said when you see something in the market that really, really excites you, "bet the ranch on it." 

"I think diversification and all the stuff they're teaching at business school today is probably the most misguided concept everywhere," Druckenmiller said during a speech on January 18th at the Lone Tree Club in North Palm Beach, Florida.

In his speech, Druckenmiller described his investment philosophy as that of a "pig" instead of a stock market "bull" or "bear." 

"The first thing I heard when I got in the business....was bulls make money, bears make money, and pigs get slaughtered. I'm here to tell you I was a pig. And I strongly believe the only way to make long-term returns in our business that are superior is by being a pig."

The 61-year-old founder of Duquesne Capital Management has one of the best long-term track records in the hedge fund world. He retired in 2010 and now runs his firm as a family office. 

He explained that if you find a trade that "excites you" tend to have better results.

"And if you look at what excites you and then you look down the road, your record on those particular transactions is far superior to everything else, but the mistake I'd say 98 percent of money managers and individuals make is they feel like they've got to be playing with a bunch of of stuff. And if you really see it, put all your eggs in one basket and watch the basket very carefully."  

These sorts of trades don't happen often though. They usually happen one or two times a year, Druckenmiller explained. 

During Druckenmiller's career, he had two mentors and one of them was famed fund manager George Soros. 

Working for Soros cemented Druckenmiller's investment philosophy of "if you see it, you got to go for it." 

Druckenmiller worked a portfolio manager for Soros' Quantum Fund. He noted that Soros had been spending a majority of his time on philanthropy in addition to running his personal account.

According to Druckenmiller, about 90% of the trades Soros was making were actually his ideas. Soros was crushing Druckenmiller's returns though. 

"I'm a competitive person, frankly embarrassing, that in his personal account working about 10% of the time he continued to beat Duquesne and Quantum while I was managing the money," Druckenmiller said. "And again it's because he was taking my ideas and he just had more guts. He was betting more money with my ideas that I was."

Druckenmiller shared the story of he and Soros' famous British pound short bet that "Broke the Bank of England." Druckenmiller said that he had pitched his short idea to Soros and suggested that they put 100% of the fund in the trade.

Soros told Druckenmiller that was "ridiculous" and that they should put more even more on it. 

"That is the most ridiculous use of money management I ever heard," Soros said to Druckenmiller. "What you described is an incredible one-way bet. We should have 200 percent of our net worth in this trade, not 100 percent. Do you know how often something like this comes around?" 

That trade certainly paid off. 

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