World's Biggest Public Hedge Fund Bets on Emerging-Markets Rout

The world’s largest publicly-traded hedge fund is bracing for a selloff in emerging markets, a view that pits it against bulls at some of Wall Street’s biggest investment banks.

This year’s spectacular rally in risk assets isn’t justified by improvements in economic fundamentals and is set to reverse, according to Man Group Plc, which manages $138 billion in assets, almost half of them within Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

“We are expecting the selloff within the next two months,” Guillermo Osses, the fund’s New York-based head of emerging-market debt strategies, told Bloomberg in an interview. “People have added exposure, probably a large part of the rally has already taken place, and now find themselves very long on risky assets with very tight valuations when the liquidity conditions are turning. This is why we think you will have a significant selloff.”

London-based Man Group shares are up 23% so far this year, compared with a 6% gain on the FTSE 100. Its bearish view on emerging markets contrasts with optimism at fund managers from Morgan Stanley Investment Management to Goldman Sachs, while even some bulls say the ferocity of the rally has them getting more selective.

Osses declined to comment on the group’s positioning or recommendations, citing company policy. The EM debt fund he manages outperformed 99% of peers last year, when it warned of default risk and eked out a 2.4% return, compared with an average 14% loss among peers, according to data and rankings compiled by Bloomberg.