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Bloomberg – The Obama administration will announce details of a plan today to expand the $700 billion rescue of the financial system that will rely on enticing private investors to buy the troubled assets clogging banks’ balance sheets.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who will unveil the Public Private Investment Program today, has crafted an approach using up to $100 billion of bailout money to spur investment funds to purchase — and banks to unload — the illiquid securities and loans that have caused credit to dry up. The Treasury, Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. will all play a role alongside private investors in aiming to buy between $500 billion and $1 trillion of troubled assets.
“By providing a market for these assets that does not now exist, this program will help improve asset values, increase lending capacity by banks, and reduce uncertainty about the scale of losses on bank balance sheets,” Geithner said in an op-ed piece published in today’s Wall Street Journal. “The ability to sell assets to this fund will make it easier for banks to raise private capital.”
Bloomberg – James Pallotta and Christopher Pia, hedge-fund managers who recently struck out on their own, are discovering just how much the global financial crisis is reducing investors’ appetite for risk.
Pallotta, who split from Tudor Investment Corp. last month, and Pia, who spent 13 years managing money for Moore Capital Management LLC, probably will raise about $500 million apiece this year, according to brokers who provide loans and administrative services to hedge funds. Michael Ryan, who left Credit Suisse Group AG to open Jai Capital Management, will top out at around the same amount, according to the brokers, who asked not to be identified because the funds are private.
Investors, who put more than $1 billion each into seven new hedge funds last year, are scaling back after the industry posted its worst year on record in 2008. Whether it’s a big-name manager like Boston-based Pallotta or a newcomer, that threshold will be harder to cross this year than in the boom of 2002 through 2007.
West Palm Beach (HedgeCo.net) – In response to the recent need to restore confidence and liquidity in the mortgage market, Integrated Asset Services, LLC (IAS), a default management and residential collateral valuation company, is introducing iCDA Credit Due Diligence Analytics.
Expecting clients from hedge funds, mutual funds, private investors, government agencies, ratings agencies, and mortgage originators, IAS calls their system a “surgically precise” review of borrower credit worthiness, collateral valuation, and compliance for loan buyers.
“iCDA is designed to expose both the risk and merit of an asset beyond the historic origination and compliance guidelines," John Coughlin, VP of Capital Markets for IAS said, "Using our suite of analytic tools to forecast performance, we can identify exit strategies and recommend loan modifications and repayment plans for your assets.”
“We’ve combined IAS’s expert default professional services with innovative new technology and a few key alliances to provide a robust, single-source solution,” says Robert Vanderbilt, First Vice President for Integrated Asset Services. "We have to think the integrity of our approach and the fullness of our product will go a long way toward getting the mortgage market moving again,” said Vanderbilt.
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