Finance

Billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller said he’s been ‘humbled’ by markets after missing out on the historic stock rally

druckenmiller, stan druckenmiller, stanley druckenmillerGetty Images/ Scott Olson

  • Stanley Druckenmiller has been “humbled” by markets following stocks’ historic 50-day rally, he said in a CNBC interview Monday.
  • “I’ve been humbled many times in my career, and I’m sure I’ll be many times in the future. And the last three weeks certainly fits that category,” Druckenmiller said.
  • Druckenmiller said last month that the stock market’s risk-reward profile was one of the worst he’d ever seen, and he discounted the Fed’s ability to save the economy.
  • Now, Druckenmiller says he underestimated the Fed, and is up only 3% after the market’s 40% rally.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller has been “humbled” by markets after missing out on stocks’ historic 50-day rally, according to a CNBC interview on Monday.

The stock market has rallied more than 40% off its March 23 low, marking the strongest 50-day rally in its history.

Last month, Druckenmiller said in an interview with the Economic Club of New York that the stock market’s risk/reward profile was one of the worst he’s ever seen, and he discounted the Fed’s ability to save the economy.

Fast forward one month, and Druckenmiller admits he is humbled by the market.

“I’ve been humbled many times in my career, and I’m sure I’ll be many times in the future. And the last three weeks certainly fits that category,” Druckenmiller said.

The hedge fund manager said he’s up only 3% relative to the market’s 40% rally, essentially missing out on the entire market run over the past two months.

Read more:MORGAN STANLEY: The stock market is entering a new phase of a playbook that’s thrived in past recessions. Here’s how to tweak your portfolio to take advantage.

Druckenmiller has had long-term concerns over the past few years due to the build up of too much debt in the corporate sector, and said he believed that COVID-19 would be the catalyst for that corporate debt bubble to unwind.

But the Fed’s unprecedented actions of buying investment-grade and high-yield debt to shore up the credit market went against Druckenmiller’s thesis of the corporate debt bubble popping due to the economic shock caused by COVID-19.

“I underestimated how many red lines and how far the Fed would go,” Druckenmiller said.

Read more:Baillie Gifford cashed in on Amazon and Tesla before the vast majority of investors. A 33-year partner at the firm breaks down a risk that scares him more than the pandemic — and details 3 stocks he’s buying for the new era.

Despite Druckenmiller’s bearish views, he still owns some stocks.

“Amazon and Microsoft are my largest holdings, but I have the least growth rating in my portfolio I’ve had for maybe six or seven years,” he said.

Druckenmiller continued, “I don’t want your viewers to get too excited on that … I can change my mind in a week or two.”

That comment echoes recent thoughts from CNBC’s Josh Brown, who detailed why individual investors shouldn’t take investment advice from billionaire hedge fund managers.

Read more:MORGAN STANLEY: Buy these 11 stocks right now to reap the strongest possible market-beating returns over the next 3 months

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