How a Single Family Fund Cost Credit Suisse Billions

Alexis Goldstein
7 min readMar 31, 2021

Archegos Capital’s Bill Hwang was sanctioned by the SEC and banned from trading in Hong Kong. Banks still lent him billions of dollars to make risky trades — and paid the price.

When ViacomCBS lost half its value at the end of March, it turned into a $33 billion firesale thanks to Archegos Capital, Total Return Swaps, and leverage.

April 7, 2021 Update: Since this post was originally published, Credit Suisse revealed their losses were worse than the $4 billion anticipated. The firm is writing down $4.7 billion due to its Archegos exposure, cutting its dividend, suspending share buybacks, and removing senior executives, including investment bank head Brian Chin and risk chief Lara Warner. Reporting also revealed that Archegos had turned $200 million into $20 billion in assets before it all imploded. Archegos’ Bill Hwang used an increasingly dangerous strategy: every time his leveraged bets went well, he’d put the profits back into trades with even larger leverage. This wasn’t just a risk for Archegos, but one to the banks extending this leverage to the firm. As one anonymous executive at a bank with billions of dollars of exposure to Archegos told the Financial Times, “‘It’s pretty hard for me to defend why we loaned him so much,’.” This all leaves some serious questions (like those I raise below) about gaps in reporting, and what went wrong in the risk management at these major banks.

At the end of March, ViacomCBS’s stock positively tanked, losing half its value in less than a week. But Viacom’s woes turned into a $33 billion, market-wide asset liquidiation event thanks to the holdings of a family fund Archegos Capital, run by Sung Kook (“Bill”) Hwang.

ViacomCBS lost more than half of its value from March 22 — March 29, 2021

The troubles at Archegos led to market-wide fire sales due to a combination of factors, including:

  • What Arechegos was trading (derivatives that mimic stocks, called Total Return Swaps), and the leverage Archegos employed in doing these trades;
  • Who Archegos was trading with (a number of large banks);
  • The lack of disclosures. Many banks were on the same side of the same trade, which exacerbated the firesale. But that fact appeared largely unknown till it all went bust.

What was Archegos Capital doing?

Reporting indicates that Archegos’ long positions were concentrated in about eight names:

  1. ViacomCBS (VIAC)
  2. Discovery Inc. (DISCA)
  3. Tencent Music Entertainment Group (TME)
  4. GSX Techedu Inc. (GSX)
  5. Baidu Inc. (BIDU)
  6. Farfetch Ltd (FTCH)
  7. Iqiyi Inc. (IQ)
  8. Vipshop Holdings Ltd. (VIPS)

But Arechgos wasn’t buying stocks in these companies. Instead, perhaps in order to avoid the kinds of disclosures that are required when you hold a certain amount of stocks, Archegos used derivatives that mimic the performance of stocks, but don’t have the same disclosure requirements. One of the derivatives they used are called Total Return Swaps (TRS), also known as an “equity swap.”

You can think of a TRS as a financial product that provides nearly the same economic payoffs as a stock — but it isn’t a stock, it’s a swap. Swaps are financial instruments where two parties “swap” payments, with one party — the payer — making payments based on the return of an underlying “reference” asset, and the other — the receiver — making payments based on a pre-set rate. (You can read more about swaps here).

This arrangement allows the receiving party to receive all the economic benefits of a reference asset (like a stock’s income and capital gains), without actually owning the asset.

Illustration of a hypothetical Total Return Swap on Viacom between an investment bank and a private fund

Why might you do this? One might do it to try and avoid taxes of owning the stock outright. You might do it to gain access to a stock in a country that you have to live in to purchase. Or, you might do it, as it seems Archegos may have done, to avoid disclosing what you own to the public.

But this arrangement creates credit risks for the TRS payer. And that risk broke wide open last week for Archegos’ counterparties, which included a number of major banks.

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Who was Archegos trading with?

Archegos had what’s called a prime broker relationship with a number of major banks, including Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse, UBS and Nomura.

Large banks offer a number of bundled services to hedge funds and large private funds through an offering called Prime Brokerage. These services can include: borrowing securities (via securities lending) executing trades (including trades that use leverage), and cash management. (If you’d like a concrete example, here’s a PDF from Morgan Stanley marketing their prime brokerage offering.)

ViacomCBS’s falling share price led to a margin call

Reporting has shown that Archegos held Total Return Swaps on the eight stocks listed above with its prime brokers. In order to manage their risk, the banks demand collateral to demonstrate that Archegos wouldn’t go under should their trades go poorly.

When ViacomCBS shares started falling, one (or more) of Archegos’ prime brokers hit them with a margin call — a demand to deposit additional collateral — which Archegos couldn’t meet.

A $33 billion firesale

When Archegos failed to meet its margin call, the banks with trading relationships with Archegos needed to begin to unwind the massive positions. But since they all needed to sell shares of the same eight stocks, there was no way to do it without moving the market.

And move the market they did! Here’s the daily charts of just four of the stocks (BIDU, VIAC, TME, GSX) that Archegos had derivative positions in, over the last week:

Charts via Interactive Brokers

Once they understood what was happening, Archegos’ counterparties met to try and figure out how they could all offload giant blocks of the same stocks in a way that would cause the least disruption to the market. The Financial Times reported:

Before the troubles at the family office burst into public view at the end of the week, representatives from its trading partners Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse, UBS and Nomura held a meeting with Archegos to discuss an orderly wind-down of troubled trades.

But it seems Goldman Sachs moved first, followed by Morgan Stanley, as they sold roughly $19 billion in big block trades of Archegos-linked stocks within a day. In doing so, they sold before the other banks did, snuffing out any hopes of coordination and stemming their losses before the market began to move against the stocks they all needed to offload.

Why were so many prime brokers doing business with someone banned from Hong Kong’s trading markets?

Prior to launching Archegos Capital, Hwang pleaded guilty to wire fraud charges in 2012, and paid $44 million to settle insider trading charges with the SEC that same year. Two years later, he was banned from trading in the Hong Kong markets for 4 years after admitting to using inside information to trade Chinese bank stocks.

Hwang managed up to $10 billion of the Hwang family’s wealth at Archegos, whose prime brokers allowed the firm to borrow and hold assets many multiples its total size.

Since extending Total Return Swaps to a counterparty carries credit risk with it, it seems likely that Credit Suisse and Nomura are regretting their dealings with Archegos, as they’ve now both been hit by heavy losses as they unwound their positions with the fund. From Reuters:

Credit Suisse has yet to confirm its losses, but the sources said the Swiss bank faces losses of up to $4 billion. Nomura, Japan’s largest investment bank, warned on Monday of a possible $2 billion loss.

Bank stocks have taken a hit across the board this week, despite Goldman and Morgan Stanley trying to reassure the markets that they got out in time.

Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Nomura all largely down in the last week. via Interactive Brokers

What could the SEC do to improve transparency?

While Archegos Capital is not a hedge fund, their use of Total Return Swaps to avoid reporting stock trades on the Form 13F is a technique also utilized by certain hedge funds in order to avoid the disclosures.

The SEC could act to address this by expanding the range of financial products disclosed by form 13F. This would help regulators and the broader public have a better window into the activities of hedge funds. The SEC could change the reporting on Form 13F to include:

  • Short stock positions
  • Short option positions
  • Total Return Swaps and other equity derivatives that mimic the behavior and payouts of stocks.

The could also complete the derivatives rules mandated by the 2010 Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, also know as Dodd-Frank, which are still outstanding.

Is there a role for Congress in Archegos?

Another issue highlighted by the Archegos situation is the carve out that family funds enjoy from registering under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act exempted family offices managing solely their own finances this requirement. Congress, together with the regulators, may want to examine if this exemption for family funds like Archegos are creating regulatory blind spots that contribute to systemic risk.

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Alexis Goldstein

Alexis is a former Wall Street worker who now advocates for a safer & fairer economy.