Vulture Funds Feast On Debt During Economic Slowdown
23 Jan 13:12
By Christiane Bird Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--The slowing economy and recent surge in bankruptcy filings and disappointing earnings may be bad news for most businesses, but vulture funds, or funds that invest in distressed debt, are having a heyday.
"We've been finding a lot of attractive opportunities out there," said Martin Whitman, manager of the $1.7 billion Third Avenue Value Fund, New York. "We're at a peak in distressed debt now that we haven't seen in five years." Over the past six months, Whitman has increased the distressed debt holdings of his fund, which invests mostly in deep value companies, to 7% from 2%.
Similarly, Jeffrey Altman, co-manager of distressed investing for the $20 billion Franklin Mutual Series funds, a six-fund family, has increased all his funds' distressed debt holdings to 8% to 10% from 5% to 7% six months ago. The rest of the funds' holdings are in value companies and arbitrage.
"This is a very interesting time for distressed debt," he said. "And as the economy weakens, we'll see more and more opportunities. We expect our distressed debt holdings to continue to grow." Distressed debt investors buy the debt of troubled companies at a fraction of its face value in the hopes that the debt will eventually be worth more.
Distressed debt can take the form of bank loans, corporate bonds or debt to suppliers.
Nowadays, distressed debt fund managers are seeing investment opportunities almost everywhere they turn.
Whitman is especially interested in companies involved in asbestos-related lawsuits that have scared off investors. One of his top holdings is USG Corp.
(USG), maker of gypsum wallboard, which, though suffering from an "asbestos taint," also owns solid subsidiaries which offer good protection, he said.
"But that's just to name one investment area," he went on. Many movie chains, nursing homes andassisted nursing homes have filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy or are considering filing, he noted. "Plenty of retailers are also going belly up," he said.
Altman is also paying especially close attention to nursing homes, as well as to funeral homes, troubled California utilities and large downgraded companies.
He recently purchased some of the debt of Finova Group Inc. (FNV), a commercial lender, and Xerox Corp. (XRX).
"We're seeing a wall of distressed debt out there coming at us from every direction," said David Winters, director of research at the Mutual Series funds.
Niche Market But despite the current economic climate, the number of mutual funds that invest in distressed debt is extremely limited.
"It's a niche market," said Eric Jacobson, a senior analyst at Morningstar Inc. "When it comes to weak companies, most mutual fund managers tend to steer away because of the credit risks involved - which is not to say it's not a valid place to invest." That risk factor also explains why even those mutual funds that do invest in distressed debt have only a small portion of their holdings in that area, he added.
Investing in distressed debt is more common among hedge funds, private investment funds, and more speculative institutional funds. But even among hedge funds, the number investing in distressed debt is limited. Of the approximately 1,500 hedge funds tracked by Managed Account Reports, only about two dozen have investments in distressed debt.
Like mutual funds, hedge funds and private investment funds are also taking advantage of the economy's current woes.
On Dec. 28, Patriarch Partners LCC, a New York-based fund boutique, acquired about $1.35 billion worth of FleetBoston Financial Corp.'s (FBF) troubled loans, for which they paid $725 million in cash and $203 million in securities.
It was the first time in more than a decade that a U.S. bank that wasn't being shut down or sold off unloaded its loans on anoutside company, On Jan. 8, the Denver-based Anschutz Corp., owned by financier Philip Anschutz, and Los Angeles-based Oaktree Capital Management LCC, one of the country's largest managers of distressed securities funds, bought some of the bank debt of Regal Cinemas Inc. (X.RGL), the movie theater chain. The two investment companies acquired about $350 million of Regal's $1 billion in syndicated bank loans - meaning large corporate loans put together by a group of lenders - with Anschutz taking about 80% and Oaktree 20%.
Turnberry Capital Management, which manages three hedge funds which invest in distressed debt, had a "spectacular" 2000, after a mediocre 1999 and a lousy 1998, said Jeff Dobbs, a partner at the fund company. Much of that success was due to the funds' strong exposure to the U.S. natural gas sector through both bonds and stocks, he said.
Dobbs is currently paying especially close attention to high-yield bonds issued by solvent companies, which he calls the 'the greatest area of growth" in distressed debt.
However, not all industry observers view the current distressed debt market as a promising opportunity.
'New Economic Paradigm' "There's been a lot of press lately about prices being at 1990 levels, but there were more good buys in the early '90s than there are today," said Charles Gradante, president and chief investment strategist for the Hennessee Hedge Fund Advisory Group of New York. "I think we're in a new economic paradigm where many of the major players now in trouble - J.C. Penney Co. (JCP), Xerox - may not survive" to pay back their debts.
Much of the reason for that, he went on, is the Internet, which has had an enormous impact on everything from retailers to car dealerships which now sell on the Web.
Eugene Major, chief investment officer for Dunbar Capital Management LLC, said he's "not convinced that there's tremendous opportunity there" although he has seen considerably more activity inthe distressed debt market.
"The results of most funds seems to be mixed," Major said. "Smart people are being cautious." Many of the high-yield issuances are of dubious quality, he said, and with the economy slowing and an increase in default rates, the distressed debt market could suffer.
-By Christiane Bird, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-2046; christiane.bird@dowjones.com (END) DOW JONES NEWS 01-23-01 01:12 PM |