"Interestingly, hedge funds are the largest users of credit derivatives and CDS. Several of the largest Wall Street firms estimate that 50-60% of their current trading volume in CDS is with hedge funds. These leveraged funds use CDX index products to gain a diversified exposure to credit, thus earning positive carry. Two trades, which have been popular with hedge funds, are long CDX index products/short individual CDS names (Strategy A) and long CDX index products/short equity calls (Strategy B).
...Strategy B is an income generation strategy (which is also being implemented by $10 billion closed-end income generation funds started in the past year). This strategy seeks to produce income via long exposure to spread product, yet gives up any large equity upside by selling calls. Both hedge funds and closed-end funds have been aggressive sellers of equity call options over the past year, suppressing implied equity volatility. This created an illusion of calm waters. However, as soon as equities fell and volatility spiked, these calm waters got surprisingly rough in a short amount of time as investors shifted into "risk reduction" mode and unwound long credit positions, bought equity put options and bought protection on CDX index products. This leveraged unwind trade caused credit spreads to widen sharply, put downward pressure on stocks and caused implied volatility on CDX options to spike."