Archegos fund blow up sends shockwaves through Wall Street

In This Article:

Steve Sosnick, Interactive Brokers chief market strategist, joins Yahoo Finance to discuss the market impact of the Archegos debacle.

Video Transcript

JULIE HYMAN: Let's bring in Steve Sosnick to talk more about this. He's Interactive Brokers' chief market strategist, and, of course, he watches a lot of the action and has a front-row seat to all of this that has been going on. So Steve, how important, how material is this gonna be to the market?

STEVE SOSNICK: Well, first of all, good morning, Julie. Good morning, Brian. I think this is going to be material, but not-- but still somewhat of a sideshow. I guess the biggest question, as you alluded to, is who else looks like this? How many other funds look like this? I think this is-- I'd be shocked to find that this was a unique structure among heavily-levered hedge funds, family offices, et cetera.

And so we don't really know. I mean, I think there'll be some attempts to try to fact-find what happened. I do think a lot of it had to do with the fact that Viacom and Discovery, particularly, went parabolic over the last month. And then, you know, to think that what potentially ended this was the fact that the Viacom board did what they should have done, which is raise a stock offering when it was about $100 a share.

But the way the stock fell Apart so quickly, really, I don't think anybody anticipated that. I think people anticipated it would fall, but you know, you have to think, were these banks-- first of all, how did a bank with 5 to 10-- how did a person, literally a person; it's a family office-- with $5 to $10 billion end up with exposures that are gonna cost the banks way more than that, potentially?

And what was this guy doing? Was he continuing-- let's assume he had Viacom the whole way. You have a stock that's been in the 40s for years, and all of a sudden, it gets up to 100. Are you continuing to use the excess margin that's created from buying the stock, from the stock appreciation, are you then just using that to continue to lever up? And did all the prime brokers allow this? And what did one broker know about the other?

This is gonna be, in many ways, a lot like the-- you know, a lot like the inquiries after GameStop, although this is gonna be a more interesting one, because it's not the public. It's a very opaque area and a very profitable area of the market.

BRIAN SOZZI: Steve, isn't the other problem here that we could see this year more whale blowups like Bill Long? Because the reality is, a lot of these levered trades have been made about, made caused by, I would argue, low rates. Well, you know what? That is starting to incrementally turn around. So all these trades could have, in effect, go the wrong way of other whale accounts, no?