Poking through Archegosâ trash⦠[TradeSmith Daily logo]
[TradeSmith Daily logo] May 18, 2024 Are These Neglected Chinese Stocks a Buy? By Michael Salvatore, Editor, TradeSmith Daily In March 2020, one hedge fund manager took on an obscenely risky position to leverage a unique moment in history. The stock market was just beginning a one-way trip higher in the wake of the Federal Reserveâs generous pandemic response. Trillions in liquidity meant making money over the next year would be almost too easy. But while that hedge fund managerâs tactics worked for a while⦠they came crashing down a year later⦠and he took a few stocks with him. His name is Bill Hwang: a Korean-American investor who had set up a âfamily officeâ called Archegos Capital Management at the time. (I use sneer quotes because this family office operated a lot more like a hedge fund, just with fewer regulations.) At one point, Archegos managed over $36 billion â much of it in a handful of single stock positions. Many of those companies are solid, as weâll see in a bit, but the positions were highly leveraged. And thatâs where he got into trouble. Alongside Hwangâs personal fortune, Archegos borrowed billions from a dozen different banks to build up these positions. Further, they used complex derivatives trades to amplify their market exposure (risk) from a starting point of $10 billion to more than $160 billion at the peak. This went on until March 26, 2021: The day Archegos got margin-called into financial oblivion. SPONSORED AD [This New Idea is Set to Shock the World]( PayPal was not a popular idea at first. In the late 1990s, when most people were still mailing checks, Elon Muskâs idea of making payments over the internet was unimaginable. Now, though, PayPal is a promising contender in the ever-competitive AI boom. It seems that everything Musk has done throughout his career sounded insane at first... Which is why itâs important that you pay attention to his [latest, strange invention](. Itâs an AI device that could be the most [powerful technology ever created](. This new idea is set to shock the world once again â and this time, you donât want to be a nonbeliever. [Click here to learn all the details](
A Cautionary Tale... and an Opportunity Bloomberg reports that Hwang personally lost $20 billion in just two days, as key stock positions in ViacomCBS and Discovery Inc. lost more than a quarter of their value within a week and triggered the margin call. Archegosâ creditors â Credit Suisse, Nomura Holdings, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley, among others â all faced massive losses. Archegos was forced to liquidate billionsâ worth of stocks to attempt to meet their obligations. They didnât. The losses among Archegosâ lenders were over $8.3 billion. The impact on the stocks Archegos held was significant â with some just narrowly avoiding bankruptcy. This past week, Bill Hwang stood trial against accusations of securities fraud, wire fraud, and racketeering conspiracy in connection with the blowup. The wheels of justice are still turning, with the trial set to take as long as eight weeks. In all likelihood, Bill Hwang will serve time. Now, why am I telling you this story? For one, itâs a cautionary tale against leverage. No matter how right you think you are, the market has a funny habit of humbling the overconfident. When you use and abuse leverage, losses can quickly spiral out of control. But the far bigger thing on our mind is some of the stocks Archegos was forced to liquidate⦠and where they are today. Should You Buy Archegosâ Casualties? ViacomCBS and Discovery â now both since acquired by larger media companies â were the headliners of the Archegos story. But they werenât the only affected stocks. Aside from being bullish on media streaming, Bill Hwang had a penchant for Chinese tech companies⦠and he had one clothing brand in the mix, too. Hereâs a look at how the rest of Archegosâ portfolio has done since March 2021: As you can see, during the run-up to the crash, almost all of Archegosâ core holdings were outperforming the S&P 500. Since the crash, though, theyâve all lagged significantly. Clothing brand Farfetch (FTCHF) now trades over the counter with a valuation of less than $1 million. GSX Techedu (GOTU) suffered not just the Archegos capital blowup but also the Chinese government cracking down on the entire for-profit education industry there. But letâs focus on a few of the survivors in the Chinese tech space: Tencent Music Entertainment (TME), Vipshop (VIPS), Baidu (BIDU), Gaotu Techedu (GOTU), and iQIYI (IQ). Each of these stocks are Chinese tech companies â a very hot trade leading up to the Archegos debacle and basically toxic afterward. Seeing the trial this week, and remembering the Archegos blowup from 2021, it got me curious about whether these stocks are buys. Now, we could roll up our sleeves and start studying balance sheets and charts to figure it out. Or we can see the three most important factors â fundamental strength, technical health, and the signs of big institutional capital â and combine them into one simple number. Regular readers will guess Iâm talking about Jason Bodnerâs Quantum Score â a composite rating that highlights stocks in the âsweet spotâ of those three factors. Stocks that rate between 70 and 85 on the Quantum Score are part of an elite class of companies that, had you held them exclusively over the past 25 years, wouldâve outperformed the S&P 500 7-to-1. Letâs take a look at those five Chinese tech companies and see how they rate... SPONSORED AD [The Hersheyâs Bar Indicator is Crashing...]( In 1913, one dollar bought 30 Hersheyâs Bars. Today, one dollar canât even buy a single Hersheyâs Bar. With over 96% of the dollarâs purchasing power gone, any further decline could trigger a full-scale currency crisis. Can your wealth survive a dollar collapse? [Click here before itâs too late](
How the Quantum Score Rates These 5 Chinese Techs 1. Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) First up is Tencent Music Entertainment (TME), a subsidiary of the broader Tencent entertainment group and whatâs essentially the Spotify of China. On Jasonâs Quantum Score, TME earns a place right in the middle of the sweet spot⦠with an especially hot, even dangerously hot technical score owing to its recent momentum (shares are up 78% year-to-date, well outpacing the market): TME isnât cheap at 34 times forward earnings, but it is earnings-positive, which we canât say about Spotify (SPOT). This is one to keep an eye on for a pullback. A technical score that high means we shouldnât chase the stock at these prices. 2. Vipshop (VIPS) Vipshop (VIPS) is the third-largest e-commerce brand in China. Itâs also the largest in the discount retailer segment, with over 38% market share. If we compare Chinaâs largest e-commerce giant JD.com to something like Amazon.com, Vipshop might fill a space closer to Walmart. VIPS caught my eye for its Thursday performance, which saw it rise over 3% on the day. Itâs also quite cheap for its segment, trading at just 8.5 times forward earnings. The company also recently declared its first dividend at $0.41 per share. Taking it over to the Quantum score, however, we get a less-ideal picture. The Quantum Score gives VIPS a 48.3 â not terrible, but not in the sweet spot that would flag a buy signal. The biggest ding is on the technical score. VIPSâ share price has been largely flat for the past year. In laymanâs terms, itâs not a âwinnerâ stock that lots of investors want to buy. Itâs acting like a stable steady-eddy name, but without the commanding market share or market cap to back that up. Jasonâs system is tuned for growth opportunities â he wants to see earnings and revenue growing year after year, alongside strong institutional support. Weâre not seeing that with VIPS, at least not right now. 3. Baidu (BIDU) Next, letâs look at Baidu (BIDU). This was another of the favorites from the Chinese tech trade in early 2021. The stock ran over 150% higher in the three months between November 2020 and February 2021, before Archegos sent it on a roundtrip. Today, the stock trades more than two-thirds below its all-time high set during that time. Similar to VIPS, we can think of Baidu as the Google of China. Itâs the dominant search-engine player in the region â especially since Chinaâs internet is restricted from accessing Western services â and offers a number of other internet services, including cloud and AI. Itâs also something of an earnings rockstar. Since July 2015, the company has beaten every single one of its quarterly earnings estimates. Itâs not a fast grower, though, with a five-year compound annual growth rate of just 5.3%. That slow growth rate may be contributing to Jasonâs Quantum Edge score: BIDU manages to match VIPS on the Quantum Score, with a slightly higher fundamental score making up for a slightly worse technical score. From a growth-investing perspective, this just isnât showing the kind of buy signal youâd want to see. As I mentioned, the sweet spot is when the overall Quantum Score gets up into the 70-to-85 range. And while there are lots of technical factors we canâ and do â use, Jasonâs technical score revolves around big money buying. 4. Gaotu Techedu (GOTU) Gaotu Techedu (GOTU), formerly GSX Techedu, is an especially interesting case. Itâs one of the worst casualties of the Archegos collapse, but itâs also one of the best performers recently. Itâs up more than 150% year-to-date. Archegos was the first punch, but the second came just four months later, when the Chinese government cracked down on the then-$100 billion private education sector. Now, though, GOTU appears to be recovering from the fallout of 2021. And this yearâs momentum is giving GOTU an edge on the Quantum Edge score, bringing it closer to a buy signal: 5. iQIYI (IQ) Finally we have iQIYI, a video- and entertainment-streaming company similar to Hulu or Netflix here at home. This is another one of the major casualties from the Archegos blowup, down more than 78% from its peak. Today, though, it earns a rare buy signal from Jasonâs Quantum Edge score. IQ earns a 74.1 on the Quantum Score, right in the middle of the sweet spot that flashes a buy signal. Its technical score is a huge factor here, even as shares are up just 14% year-to-date, signaling the likely presence of big institutional buying. As billion-dollar funds move into these stocks, thatâs when the magic tends to happen for their stock price. Archegos is one of the most dramatic examples, but this dynamic plays out in the market every single day. Jason is particularly adept at spotting it⦠since he used to be the professional trader tasked with buying (lots of) shares for institutions on the downlow. Jason reports his findings to subscribers every Monday in [Quantum Edge Pro]( and his Quantum Scores are available in the TradeSmith Finance dashboard as well. [Click here to learn more if youâd like his help navigating the big-money-driven market](. To your health and wealth, [Michael Salvatore]Michael Salvatore
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