U.S. stocks have piled up $1.5 trillion in market value this year, but hedge funds are bracing for tough times ahead. Based on buying and selling in 2017, managers have stopped loading up on bullish positioning.
Category: Credit Suisse Asset Mnagement Income Fund
European Stocks Gain as Banks Surge on Fed Rate Hike Speculation
European markets rose firmly higher Tuesday as bank surged on increased speculation of a March rate hike from the Federal Reserve. European markets rose firmly higher Tuesday as bank stocks surged on increased speculation of a March rate hike from the U.S. Federal Reserve and industrial stocks gained on bets that President Donald Trump will find support for his $1 trillion in infrastructure spending plans.
Long-Short Hedge Funds Are Ditching the Shorts to Focus on Longs
What happens when you take the “short” out of a long-short trading strategy? Some hedge funds are about to find out. Equity long-short fund managers, the biggest category in hedge funds, hold the fewest bearish stock bets on record, data compiled by Credit Suisse Group AG show.
Credit Suisse Moves to Block Jefferies Bid to Hire Bankers
Credit Suisse Group AG is seeking to thwart an attempt by Jefferies Group LLC to lure away a group of senior bankers. Five of eight Credit Suisse bankers who had been in talks to join Jefferies have instead agreed to stay on, according to a spokeswoman for the Swiss lender.
Credit Suisse Nearing U.S. Mortgage Settlement, Reuters Says
Credit Suisse Group AG may reach an agreement as soon as this week to settle a U.S. investigation into its handling of mortgage-linked securities before the 2008 financial crisis, Reuters reported. Switzerland’s second-largest bank is confident it can reach a resolution for less than the $5 billion to $7 billion that the Department of Justice has demanded, the publication quoted an unidentified person familiar with the talks as saying, without specifying when that request was made.
Credit Suisse Nearing U.S. Mortgage Settlement, Reuters Reports
Credit Suisse Group AG may reach an agreement as soon as this week to settle a U.S. investigation into its handling of mortgage-linked securities before the 2008 financial crisis, Reuters reported. Switzerland’s second-largest bank is confident it can reach a resolution for less than the $5 billion to $7 billion that the Department of Justice has demanded, the publication quoted an unidentified person familiar with the talks as saying, without specifying when that request was made.