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How one bad bet cost Carl Icahn $9bn

'You never get the perfect hedge, but if I kept the parameters I always believed in . . . I would have been fine'

Legendary activist investor and billionaire Carl Icahn has admitted that he was wrong when he made a massive bet that the stock market would crash.

"I’ve always told people there is nobody who can really pick the market on a short-term or an intermediate-term basis. Maybe I made the mistake of not adhering to my own advice in recent years," he said in an 18 May Financial Times interview.

In 2017, his bet lost about $1.8bn on hedging positions, according to FT calculations, which would have made money if asset prices had fallen. The trade lost another $7bn between 2018 and the first quarter of 2023, according to the paper.

Icahn’s investing arm Icahn Enterprises LP IEP started to short the market after the 2008 financial crisis, and became more aggressive in subsequent years. The company used a strategy of shorting broad market indexes, individual companies, commercial mortgages and debt securities.

“You never get the perfect hedge, but if I kept the parameters I always believed in . . . I would have been fine,” he said. “But I didn’t.”

READ Bill Ackman: Hindenburg’s Carl Icahn report is a ‘must read’

Instead, regulatory filings show that IEP lost $4.3bn on short positions in 2020 and 2021 as the market rallied off the pandemic slump, buoyed by the Federal Reserve’s massive stimulus.

“I obviously believed the market was in for great trouble,” Icahn said. “[But] the Fed injected trillions of dollars into the market to fight COVID and the old saying is true: ‘Don’t fight the Fed.'”

Icahn also explained what exactly he did with margin loans he borrowed from IEP that were recently highlighted by short-seller Hindenburg Research in a stinging report.

The loans were disclosed in regulatory filings in early 2022, but few seemed to notice at the time.

The Hindenburg report accused the company of inflating asset values and quested whether a margin call would send the company into a spiral if the stock price were to fall.

IEP’s stock did fall after that report — at the cost of about $6bn of market cap.

READ Icahn Enterprises’ stock plunges after Hindenburg says legend of Wall Street made a ‘classic mistake’

Icahn addressed the report on the day it was released and offered an update on IEP’s recent earnings, saying he was fully in compliance with loan terms.

He told the FT he had used the money borrowed from IEP to make additional investments outside of his publicly traded vehicle.

“Over the years I have made a great deal of money with money,” he said. “I like to have a war chest and doing that gave me more of a war chest,” he added, referring to the margin loan.

Earlier this month, IEP disclosed a federal probe into its corporate governance and other issues. It’s not clear if that was related to the Hindenburg report.

That same day, it posted earnings showing it swung to a loss in the first quarter from a profit a year ago, missing consensus estimates by a wide margin.

IEP shares have fallen 32% in the year to date, while the S&P 500 SPX has gained 9%.

This article was published by MarketWatch, part of Dow Jones

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