'Humble pie': Wall Street heavyweight confounded by share rally
Legendary hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones said investors who have been cautious around the stock market have been confounded by the recent rally.
"If there was a franchise for humble pie, oh my lord they'd be a mile long to own that, because we all had huge gulps of it - me included," Jones, the founder and chief executive officer of Tudor Investment, said on Tuesday (US time) during a webcast held by The Economic Club of New York.
Paul Tudor Jones (with Trudie Styler) was a sceptic of Wall Street's rally.Credit:Bloomberg
Jones, 65, is among the Wall Street heavyweights who voiced doubts about markets amid the COVID-19 pandemic. He told clients in early May he was a fan of gold and had put a small percentage of his firm's assets in Bitcoin as he looked for havens.
But unprecedented government intervention and the unusual nature of the US's economic woes upended expectations, he said.
As COVID-19 ravaged the globe, policymakers stepped in to support markets, including trillions of dollars in stimulus from Congress and the Federal Reserve.
The reaction was "unlike any response that we've ever seen before, and so this is not your garden-variety recession," Jones said. "Our citizenry has more cash now than they had going into what will be the shortest recession in the history of the United States."
The S&P 500 index defied initial gloomy expectations surrounding the pandemic, soaring more than 40 per cent since its March low. A better-than-expected jobs report last week added to the optimism, boosting expectations of an economic recovery. On Monday, Stan Druckenmiller - who last month warned about owning stocks - said he now believes he was "far too cautious" during the rally.
Jones was one of the first hedge fund managers to sound warnings about the virus in late January. In March, three days after the market's low, he said on CNBC that stocks should rally once virus cases peak and predicted that equities would move higher in three to five months.
The flagship hedge fund at his macro firm gained 6.3 per cent in the first five months of the year.
Asked what could bring the rosy picture to an end, Jones said "somewhere down the road" inflation will be an issue.
"I think inflation is almost going to be impossible to check by our central bank because the economy is already top heavy with debt," he said. "Trying to flight inflation will be tough because they won't be able to raise rates enough without having an impact on the rest of the economy."
Jones has an estimated net worth of $US3.4 billion ($4.9 billion), according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Bloomberg