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Greenlight's Einhorn slams oil frackers, Meister touts Yum at Sohn

By Svea Herbst-Bayliss, Jessica Toonkel and Ashley Lau

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Billionaire hedge fund manager David Einhorn kicked off the 20th annual Sohn Investment Conference in New York on Monday by laying out his case against oil frackers, arguing that these companies drill "lots and lots of holes" and burn through plenty of cash.

Einhorn, who often unveils so-called short-bets against companies at these events, cited Pioneer Natural Resources Co as a particular offender, and its stock price dropped as much as 5.3 percent. The company should trade closer to $78 a share, he said, not the $166.50 the stock is trading at now.

"Pioneer is burning cash and its reserves are not growing," said Einhorn, who runs $11 billion Greenlight Capital, adding "Pioneer ought to stop touting estimates based on stale pricing." The company is losing 20 cents of present value for every dollar it invests.

Last year Einhorn unveiled a short bet against athenahealth Inc at a previous Sohn conference and was the first to underscore problems at Lehman Brothers months before the investment bank filed for bankruptcy.

Activist investor Barry Rosenstein discussed two investment ideas that were already well known on Wall Street: His bets on drugstore chain Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc and Qualcomm Inc .

Keith Meister, a former Carl Icahn lieutenant who now runs $8 billion Corvex Management, touted fast food restaurant chain Yum Brands , saying his firm is one of the five largest investors and that the company is Corvex's second-biggest investment ever. On Friday Daniel Loeb's Third Point said it had taken a "significant" stake in Yum.

Meister said Yum should spin off its China business, allowing a fully independent China company that appeals to the nation's large middle class. He said Yum's share could trade at least at $130, compared with the current price of $92.25, after the company spins off the China operation.

For visitors to the Sohn Conference, a virtual who's who of the $3 trillion hedge fund industry held at New York's Avery Fisher Hall, the draw is getting new ideas to put into a portfolio at a time stock-picking is getting ever tougher after a multi-year bull market.

Hedge fund manager Whitney Tilson said he has not adjusted his portfolio in months and is looking for inspiration for fresh positions. "I'm a man of action and I'm hoping to get some good ideas here."

(with additional reporting by Sam Forgione in New York; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

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