Entries from April 2008 ↓
April 17th, 2008 — Investing
Ken Heebner, 67, is a founder of CGM Funds.
INVESTOR’S BUSINESS DAILY:
“One of Heebner’s secrets? He bets on a few companies tied to a gauge he can follow such as commodity prices or monthly same-store sales.”
“Beyond noting that intelligence, friends laud Heebner’s honesty and work ethic. He reads religiously, going home with stacks of analyst reports and obscure trade publications like China Metals Weekly.”
“Heebner shorted tech stocks amid the burst bubble of 2000.
He bet on home builder stocks in 2001, and they soared the next three years.
In 2005, he doubled down on commodities like copper and oil.
By 2007, he was selling short mortgage companies such as Countrywide, foreseeing the credit crisis before it filled headlines.
Those sectors contributed to last year’s 80% return in his CGM Focus — 2007’s top fund in the country.”
READ FULL STORY
April 17th, 2008 — Investing, Warren Buffett
John Burbank is a founder of San Francisco based Hedge Fund - Passport Capital. Since 2000, he says he’s netted investors the 40% annualized gains. Investors in his flagship hedge fund, $2.5 billion (assets) Passport Global Strategy, ended 2007 up 219%, even after his 1.5% management fee and 20% cut of profits. Impressive!
FORBES:
“With housing all the rage in 2004, home lenders were throwing money at people with lousy credit. Confident the market would eventually crack and intent on cushioning his global portfolio when it did, Burbank began shorting the stocks of U.S. subprime lenders.
Housing continued to go up. So Burbank doubled down by purchasing credit default swaps that would pay bounties if securities backed by subprime mortgages went into default.
“There’s no way you can make 30% returns being long the S&P 500,” the scruffy 44-year-old says of his swing-for-the-fences investing style. “If you’re going to hit that kind of return, you have to go places where it can happen.”
READ FULL STORY.