Hedge Fund Titans Rattled by US Trade Turmoil Eye Mideast Cash

When David Solomon admitted to Ken Griffin that hopes for a surge in companies going public this year had so far been miserably unfulfilled, a nervous laugh rippled through the room.

That wasn’t even the grimmest dose of anxiety at last week’s gathering in Abu Dhabi, which drew hedge fund titans eying a slice of the Gulf city’s riches.

Just a day earlier, Paul Singer, founder of Elliott Investment Management, warned the crowd that he feared the US dollar might lose its reserve currency status, according to people present, who asked not to be named discussing a private conference. Singer also cautioned that geopolitical tensions could boil over into war, without specifying which conflict.

The hedge fund chiefs had gathered for a private event convened by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. at a luxury hotel in the United Arab Emirates capital. It came against the backdrop of tariff-driven turmoil that’s roiled global markets and triggered losses at firms which, just weeks earlier, had been staunchly bullish on US President Donald Trump’s economic agenda.

Some in attendance, including Griffin’s Citadel, have emerged relatively unscathed. But for many hedge funds, their sights were set on one thing: The growing pot of money in the Middle East, which is looking increasingly attractive as US investors brace for recession risks.

Representatives for Goldman, Citadel and Elliott declined to comment.