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‘Big mistakes’: Singapore hedge fund to shut after investors flee on wrong-way bets on China, Japan stock markets

  • Asia Genesis to shut macro fund after stock slump in Hong Kong, rally in Japan wrong-footed veteran managers
  • ‘I have reached the stage whereby my confidence as a trader is lost,’ founder and CIO says in letter to investors seen by the Post

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An electronic board shows the Nikkei-225 index, which rose 1.62 per cent on Monday to 36,546.95, its highest since February 1990. Photo: EPA-EFE
Jiaxing Li
Singapore hedge fund Asia Genesis Asset Management is closing down its flagship macro fund as investors bolted after its managers made “big mistakes” and lost confidence following wrong-way bets on Chinese and Japanese stocks.

The fund said it would return money to investors as it was the logical and prudent way forward to avoid incurring further losses, according to a letter to fund investors seen by the Post. Genesis suffered an unprecedented withdrawal of about 19 per cent of its fund in the first few weeks this month.

“We made big mistakes in the recent sharp Nikkei and Hong Kong moves, which went in opposite directions,” Chua Soon Hock, founder and chief investment officer, said in the letter. “I am astounded by the incredible Nikkei-Hang Seng spread that priced Chinese versus Japanese stocks at the same value as in 1991, despite current economic realities.”

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The Hang Seng Index has tumbled more than 12 per cent this year up to January 22 to a 15-month low, while the broader market lost US$439 billion of market value, according to Bloomberg data, while the Nikkei 225 shot past a 34-year high. Overall, the Nikkei 225 has outperformed the Hang Seng Index by 64 percentage points in total returns since the start of 2023.
Chua Soon Hock, founder and CIO of Asia Genesis Asset Management in Singapore. Photo: Handout
Chua Soon Hock, founder and CIO of Asia Genesis Asset Management in Singapore. Photo: Handout

The firm declined to comment. Chua did not immediately reply to a phone call and text message for comment. Bloomberg reported the fund’s closure earlier on Tuesday.

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Chua, in an interview with the Post last month, called stocks in Hong Kong a “once-in-a-lifetime” opportunity to generate big upside. He added that the local stock market had priced in all the bad news, and that “risk reward is the best I have seen in 40 years of investing and trading.”
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