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One scoop to begin: BlueCrest Capital Administration, the hedge fund turned household workplace based by billionaire Michael Platt, has gained greater than 28 per cent this 12 months after betting on a weakening US greenback.
And one podcast: Within the newest episode of Behind the Cash, the FT’s Antoine Gara, US personal fairness and offers editor, considers why options giants Blackstone, KKR and Apollo are transferring in numerous instructions and who’s most probably to carry out finest sooner or later.
In immediately’s publication:
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Traders query ‘whether or not US exceptionalism is rather less distinctive’
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We’ve ‘surrendered extra to the machines’, says AQR’s Cliff Asness
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Junk bond gross sales surge as firms attempt to beat recent tariff uncertainty
Huge traders shift away from US markets
Huge institutional traders are shifting away from US markets as Donald Trump’s commerce wars and the nation’s escalating debt gas fears in regards to the dominance of American belongings in world portfolios.
The US president’s erratic commerce coverage has shaken world markets in current months, sparking a pointy sell-off within the US greenback and leaving Wall Avenue shares lagging far behind European rivals this 12 months.
Trump’s landmark tax invoice, which is forecast so as to add $2.4tn to Washington’s debt over the following decade, has additionally elevated stress on US Treasuries. BlackRock chief govt Larry Fink warned on Thursday that the US was “going to hit the wall” except the economic system grows shortly sufficient to handle greater deficits from authorities spending, becoming a member of a rising refrain of financiers warning in regards to the nation’s mounting debt.
The transfer away from US belongings has pushed up European markets on the expense of their US counterparts and has been signalled by surveys of massive institutional traders’ allocation choices. A ballot of fund managers printed by Financial institution of America final month confirmed the largest underweight within the US greenback in almost 20 years.
“The US has been the perfect place on the planet to speculate for a century, however I’m beginning to hear traders query whether or not US exceptionalism is rather less distinctive, and take into consideration whether or not to place their portfolios accordingly,” Howard Marks, co-founder of $203bn options supervisor Oaktree Capital Administration, informed the Monetary Instances.
“Individuals must rethink” their publicity to the US, mentioned Seth Bernstein, chief govt of AllianceBernstein, which manages $780bn in belongings.
“The deficit has been on the market as a difficulty; it’s simply getting worse,” he added. “I feel it’s untenable for the USA to proceed borrowing on the tempo it’s borrowing . . . If you couple that with what’s occurring with the unpredictability of our commerce coverage . . . It ought to trigger folks to pause and think about: how a lot would you like concentrated in a single market?”
Markets in Europe, the place a €1tn German spending spree on defence and infrastructure is predicted to spice up progress, have been a beneficiary of traders’ wariness over US publicity.
“There may be extra curiosity in Europe,” mentioned Joana Rocha Scaff, head of European personal fairness at New York-based funding agency Neuberger Berman.
“It’s greater than tariffs. The macro backdrop in Europe has not been extra benign than the US nevertheless it’s extra steady . . . It’s not simply the commerce wars however among the home instability [in the US] and proposed tax payments that affect non-US traders.”
Are you rethinking your US publicity? Electronic mail me: harriet.agnew@ft.com
Quant titan Cliff Asness embraces AI
Rage towards the machine? Quant titan Cliff Asness has determined it’s not value it anymore.
AQR Capital Administration, the $136bn group he based 25 years in the past, is embracing synthetic intelligence and machine studying methods for buying and selling choices, ending years of reticence from one of many sector’s historic holdouts.
The Connecticut-based hedge fund has “surrendered extra to the machines” after years of experiments, Asness informed my colleagues Costas Mourselas and Amelia Pollard.
“If you flip your self over to the machine you clearly let information converse extra,” he mentioned.
All quantitative hedge funds — together with Two Sigma, Man Group’s AHL division and Sir David Harding’s Winton Capital — use computing energy and algorithms to filter huge quantities of knowledge after which make use of refined fashions to make investing choices.
However AQR has beforehand been hesitant about eradicating people from buying and selling choices, as a substitute favouring rules-based laptop fashions developed by people to focus on explainable market patterns.
Regardless of first investing in broad-based machine studying expertise in 2018, AQR has solely extra lately expanded the technique past shares to different asset courses, and is now utilizing the expertise to find out the weightings given to various factors in a portfolio at any time.
The fund additionally now makes use of machine-learning algorithms to establish market patterns on which to put bets, even when in some circumstances it’s not solely clear why these patterns have developed.
Learn the total interview right here to seek out out why the personal fairness trade has attracted Asness’s ire.
In the meantime pity the poor quants at Man Group’s AHL. They’ve been ordered to briefly return to the workplace 5 days every week amid a interval of poor efficiency. It’s to assist what the corporate calls “an ‘all arms on deck’ cross-team analysis mission”. The change applies to about 150 folks in London — slightly below 10 per cent of the general group’s 1,700 staff globally.
“You can’t think about how badly this has gone down with quants,” mentioned one individual conversant in the scenario. “The temper is unhealthy.”
Chart of the week

US firms with dangerous credit score rankings are dashing to promote junk bonds forward of an anticipated resurgence of commerce tensions in July that would depress demand for company debt, writes Will Schmitt in New York.
Corporations with weaker credit score rankings tapped the high-yield bond marketplace for $32bn in Might, essentially the most since October, in line with information from JPMorgan. Junk bond gross sales within the first week of June have already got surpassed April’s $8.6bn whole.
Bankers and traders say they count on a gradual stream of recent debt gross sales the remainder of the month and into July whereas demand stays excessive and market uncertainty stays comparatively low.
However the expiration of the 90-day pause on Donald Trump’s so-called “liberation day” tariffs early subsequent month might arrange one other surge in uncertainty, echoing the early April ructions that floor the marketplace for new levered debt offers to a halt.
“You get into these patterns the place the market will get right into a lull and will get forward of itself. It feels good now, nevertheless it’s establishing for some volatility in July,” mentioned David Forgash, a portfolio supervisor at Pimco.
The additional prices paid by dangerous company debtors to lenders in comparison with US authorities debt, referred to as spreads, jumped from 3.5 share factors on April 1 to 4.61 share factors on April 7, in line with Ice BofA information.
That was the very best stage for company borrowing prices since Might 2023, as traders demanded the next premium for the added danger they noticed following Trump’s April 2 tariff announcement.
As progress seemed to be made in commerce negotiations between the US and China, spreads retreated again to the degrees skilled in late March. Nonetheless, they haven’t come again to the traditionally low marks seen in late 2024 and early 2025, when junk bond spreads fell beneath 3 share factors.
5 unmissable tales this week
Donald Trump’s plans to take public the 2 finance businesses that purchase nearly all of mortgages within the US, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, might generate a large windfall for 2 of the president’s most strident billionaire backers: Invoice Ackman and John Paulson.
Personal credit score is now so intertwined with large banks and insurers that it might turn out to be a “locus of contagion” within the subsequent monetary disaster, researchers from Moody’s Analytics, the Securities and Alternate Fee and a former high adviser to the Treasury division have warned.
Texas has eliminated BlackRock from a blacklist of firms it barred from receiving the state’s funding funds, three years after focusing on the asset supervisor for its environmental insurance policies.
Singapore’s Temasek, one of many world’s greatest traders, is drastically decreasing its investments in early-stage firms, due to rate of interest rises and following some embarrassing blow-ups for the state-owned fund.
Scalable Capital, a German funding platform backed by BlackRock, has raised €155mn in recent fairness at a valuation of about €1.5bn, as a part of a push to turn out to be a pan-European funding powerhouse within the mannequin of Charles Schwab.
And eventually

In 1959, David Hockney moved from Bradford to start his research on the Royal School of Artwork, London. A brand new exhibition at Hazlitt Holland-Hibbert focuses on the love work of this era earlier than Hockney moved to the US on the finish of 1963.
Within the Temper for Love: Hockney in London, 1960-1963
21 Might-18 July 2025
https://hh-h.com/
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