Each business day HedgeCo.Net keeps you informed with the top hedge fund industry news, opinion and insight from around the globe. From the latest hedge fund launches, to the impact of regulation, competition, and investor activism - we track the topics and people that make a difference to you.
Reuters – Hedge fund manager John Paulson is considering merging troubled U.S. finance company CIT Group Inc with failed mortgage lender IndyMac Federal Bank, the New York Post said, citing people familiar with the matter.
CIT shares rose 9.6 percent, or 16 cents, to $1.83 in morning trading.
According to the paper, the merger, a plan floated by a number of CIT creditors, including Paulson, is not part of any formal discussions between CIT and IndyMac.
Times Online – The Financial Services Authority is facing a multimillion-pound compensation claim from a group of investors who say that the City watchdog failed to stop the activities of a suspected rogue trader.
Former clients of GFX Capital Markets, which has collapsed with estimated losses of £44 million, say that the FSA knew of serious concerns about its boss, Terry Freeman, but allowed him to continue trading.
The accusation comes as the regulator is struggling to cope with the most serious loss of public confidence in its decade-long history. It was accused of being negligent in its monitoring of Northern Rock, the mortgage lender that was nationalised last year, and the regulator’s chairman, Lord Turner of Ecchinswell, has been forced to draw up radical plans to improve its ability to police the City.
New York (HedgeCo.Net) – Billionaire and hedge fund manager extraordinaire John Paulson has reportedly pocketed $139 million by betting against the Royal Bank of Scotland, further fueling cynicism that shorting aids in driving down share prices.
Paulson is no stranger at predicting trends and shorting companies that he feels fit. Late last year, his New York-based Paulson & Co. disclosed short positions in the British mortgage lender HBOS, Barclays and Lloyds TSB.
Investors turn to Paulson because he seems to have a knack for placing bets that he feels will turn out in his favor. Paulson infamously bet against the U.S. housing market in 2007, which garnered himself a $3 billion paycheck while returns on his hedge funds continued to rise. In 2008, when most hedge funds lost an average of 15 percent on the year, Paulson’s funds kept steady, with his Advantage Plus fund up 20 percent.
While some argue that the practice of shorting is responsible for driving down share prices, many feel that is an unfair assumption. The ban on short selling that was enacted last September in the UK was finally lifted earlier this month, although short positions are still required to be disclosed. The Financial Services authority has said they would reinstate the ban if it proved to be needed.
Julie Scuderi Senior Editor for HedgeCo.Net Email: julie@hedgeco.net
New York (HedgeCo.Net) – Several hedge fund firms led by J.C. Flowers & Co., are closing in on a deal to purchase the assets of IndyMac, the failed mortgage lender, as of Sunday.
The group of firms, which also include Paulson & Co. and Dune Capital Management, would buy the bank’s 33 branches, along with its $176 billion loan-servicing portfolio and its reverse-mortgage unit.
The IndyMac Bank unit was seized by regulators in July after clients moved to withdrawal $1.3 billion in cash in little over a week. The result was one of the worst U.S. bank failures in history, from a firm who managed $32 billion in assets.
Paulson & Co. is a New York-based hedge fund run by famed manager John Paulson. In the midst of one of the worst years for hedge funds to date, Paulson’s funds have managed to reap consistent returns.
Dune Capital Management is a New York-based private equity firm, founded in 2004 by ex-Goldman employees Steven Mnuchin and Daniel Niedich.
J.C. Flowers & Co., another New York-based firm, was founded in 2001 by billionaire J. Christopher Flowers, also formerly of Goldman. In 2007, the company was close to purchasing loan servicer Sallie Mae for $25 billion.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp is being advised on the sale by Barclays Capital and Deutsche Bank. A deal is expected to be finalized by the end of this year.
Julie Scuderi Senior Editor for HedgeCo.Net Email: julie@hedgeco.net
Reuters – A consortium of private equity and hedge fund firms, including J.C. Flowers & Co, is close to a deal to buy the assets of failed mortgage lender IndyMac, a source familiar with the matter said on Sunday.
The prospective buyers also include Dune Capital Management, a private investment firm run by former Goldman Sachs executives, and hedge fund Paulson & Co, the source said.
The consortium would buy the bank and its 33 branches, IndyMac’s reverse-mortgage unit and a $176 billion loan-servicing portfolio, the source said.
The presence of private equity and hedge fund firms comes after the FDIC said last month it was expanding the pool of qualified bidders to include those institutions that do not currently have a bank charter, although they must have conditional approval for a charter from the responsible agency.
Times of Malta – The situation in the international financial markets, although still displaying signs of uncertainty, seems to be settling down. Governments in the major economies, US, UK, Germany, France and Italy, no longer seem to be chasing fairies (or bad witches!), but appear to have got ahead of the situation.
The money markets (which were a major issue) are getting unblocked and as such even interbank lending rates are going down. However, this does not mean that the world has solved all its economic problems. We have simply gone back to the situation of a few months ago, when there was already fear of an international economic slowdown resulting from the increases in the price of oil and the consequent rise in inflation.
The recapitalisation of financial institutions by different governments, the partial or full re-nationalisation of such institutions and the continued provision of liquidity by governments to the financial system have restored a level of confidence that at last allows the system to function, even if not at an optimum, at least to an acceptable level.
Bloomberg – If Sherlock Holmes were analyzing the credit crunch, he would be drawing our attention to the dog that didn’t bark, just as he did in “The Hound of the Baskervilles.”
The dog, of course, would be hedge and private-equity funds.
Anyone tracking markets in recent years will remember the prediction that the unregulated, feverish trading of hedge funds, and the massive debts and complex financial engineering of buyout firms, would cause the next crash.
The crash happened, but it was started by what appeared to be safer institutions. It was the relatively dull mortgage lenders, and the investment banks that supplied their funding through the wholesale money markets, that sparked the collapse.
Reuters – Asian stocks plummeted, led by an 11 percent drop on Japan’s Nikkei, and oil prices dropped to a one-year low on Thursday as fears grew of a more protracted and sharp global slowdown than initially expected.
Major European stock markets were expected to open down as much as 5.9 percent, according to financial bookmakers, as investors anticipated poor corporate results in such an uncertain economic environment, while the dollar gained in a flight from risk.
Optimism about the stabilisation in money markets has been swept aside and widespread selling of global equities has resumed in earnest as the quarterly results season gets underway and reports trickle in about sharp losses at hedge funds.
"I think today there is just a combination of uncertainty and deleveraging in the market," said Amar Gill, head of thematic research at CLSA in Singapore.