VMware, Inc. (VMW) , Infosys Ltd ADR (INFY): Why Did These Stocks Fall Today?

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At a time when the S&P 500 is flat and the NASDAQ index is up 0.12%, VMware, Inc. (NYSE:VMW) and Infosys Ltd ADR (NYSE:INFYare down 8.1% and 6.6%, respectively, in afternoon trading. Given Infosys and VMware’s strong volume moves, let’s take a closer look at the two red stocks and examine hedge fund sentiment toward them.

Most investors don’t understand hedge funds and indicators that are based on hedge funds’ activities. They ignore hedge funds because of their recent poor performance in the bull market. Our research indicates that hedge funds underperformed because they aren’t 100% long. Hedge fund fees are also very large compared to the returns generated and they reduce the net returns experienced by investors. We uncovered that hedge funds’ long positions actually outperformed the market. For instance the 15 most popular small-cap stocks among funds beat the S&P 500 Index by more than 52 percentage points since the end of August 2012. These stocks returned a cumulative of 102% vs. 56% gain for the S&P 500 Index (read the details). That’s why we believe investors should pay attention to what hedge funds are buying (rather than what their net returns are).

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Shareholders of VMware, Inc. (NYSE:VMW) are certainly feeling left out after Dell agreed to buy EMC Corporation (NYSE:EMC) for $24.05 a share in cash plus VMware tracking stock. Because Dell is issuing VMware tracking stock to finance part of the deal, VMware’s publicly traded float will increase while demand won’t rise nearly as much. Because supply will increase more than demand, VMware shares are down more 10%. VMware shares could also be off because the company released third quarter guidance of $1.02 in EPS on revenues of $1.672 billion. Although the company beat analyst expectations of $0.99 in EPS on revenues of $1.66 billion, it might have missed the market’s expectations.

Following Monday’s sell off, VMware shares trade at a forward PE of 17.2, roughly in line with the NASDAQ’s forward PE of 17.75. Given VMware’s moat and its solid growth prospects, shares could be a buying opportunity for long term investors.

Hedge funds are divided on VMware, Inc. (NYSE:VMW). Although 35 of the around 730 elite funds we track hold just 2% of the float ($740.12 million) at the end of June, eight of VMware’s top 10 elite fund holders either established new positions or increased their positions in the second quarter. Matt Sirovich and Jeremy Mindich’s Scopia Capital increased its position by 4% to 1.79 million shares while Glenn Russell Dubin‘s Highbridge Capital Management raised its stake by 5% to 624,564 shares. Christopher Medlock James’ Partner Fund Management and Dmitry Balyasny’s Balyasny Asset Management established new positions 841,721 shares and 694,818 shares, respectively.

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