Billionaire hedge-fund giant Bill Ackman was asked on Thursday whether the nasty market rout that dragged the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite down 5% is about to usher in a dark stretch for stocks.
His answer was no. But also, maybe.
‘It’s certainly not the beginning of the end, but I would say we’re coming upon one of the more uncertain periods in American history. Markets don’t like uncertainty.’
The Pershing Square Capital CEO explained in an interview with Bloomberg TV that the upcoming presidential election and the fracture that it’s already caused across the U.S. will only serve to create more uncertainty in the coming weeks and months.
Most notably, tech stocks, with their “extraordinary” valuations could be vulnerable, he said. Apple and Tesla have been among the big leaders during the market rebound from the initial plunge in response to the coronavirus pandemic. But both were hit hard on Thursday.
While the broader decline was certainly a steep one, Ackman said it shouldn’t come as much of a surprise, considering how “remarkably strong” stocks have been since getting crushed in March.
Earlier this year, Ackman was credited in an op-ed for the New York Times for nailing “the single best trade of all time” when he set up a $27-million hedge against the market right before the March drop. Eventually, his relatively modest bearish bet turned into a $2.6-billion winner.
This article originally appeared on MarketWatch.