Clarium’s Thiel Says Pound to Weaken, Dollar to Gain

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Peter Thiel, founder of hedge-fund firm Clarium Capital 
Management LLC, said the British pound will continue to weaken this year as the 
U.S. dollar and Japanese yen appreciate. 

The U.K. is the “worst country in the world at this point,” partly because of 
its trade deficits, Thiel said today in a Bloomberg TV interview at the World 
Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. 

The British government’s efforts to protect the banking system from the 
financial turmoil last week led to a drop in the pound to the lowest level 
against the dollar since 1985. The currency traded at $1.4313 as of 11:56 a.m. 
in New York today. 

Thiel, whose fund trades everything from stocks to commodities, seeks to profit 
from broad economic trends, a strategy known as macro investing. He said that 
there would be “no fast recovery” of the global economy. 

Investors should “stay very underweight equities, if at all, and you basically 
assume that the bailouts will not work to the degree they are expected to, the 
government will do less or not succeed in stopping this deleveraging process,” 
he said. Deleveraging is the process of paying down debt to lessen the risk of 
default. 

Thiel, 41, who co-founded PayPal, started Clarium in 2002 after selling the 
online-payments service to EBay Inc. for $1.5 billion. His fund lost about 4.5 
percent last year, according to investors. Macro funds gained 5.7 percent last 
year, while all hedge funds lost an average of 18 percent, according to data 
compiled by Hedge Fund Research Inc. of Chicago. 

Government officials including U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner have 
backed greater regulation and disclosure requirements for hedge funds. 

“Some degree of regulation is probably desirable at this point, just as a way 
of reassuring the people who are invested in this industry,” Thiel said





      

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