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Non-Tech : Bill Wexler's Trading Cabana -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bill Wexler who wrote (2153)6/14/2007 3:58:24 AM
From: Doc Bones  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6370
 
Bear's Fund Is Facing
Mortgage Losses

Bond Sale Set for Today in Attempt to Raise Cash;

Woes Could Be Another Sobering Sign for Market

"I'd be willing to lend them $20. At 10% interest."

BSC is pretty reluctant to risk its money also. Like in its own Mortgage Hedge Fund.

Doc


By KATE KELLY and SERENA NG
June 14, 2007; [WSJ] Page C1

A hedge fund managed by Bear Stearns Cos. is scrambling to sell large amounts of mortgage securities, a setback for a Wall Street firm known for its savvy debt-market trading.

The fund makes bets on bonds backed by mortgages, many of which are subprime, meaning they go to especially risky borrowers.

Faced with losses on its investments, the fund, called High-Grade Structured Credit Strategies Enhanced Leverage Fund, together with a sister fund, is trying to sell about $4 billion in mortgage-backed bonds to raise cash, according to people close to the fund and traders who have been solicited to buy the bonds.

The sales represent a sliver of the $7 trillion residential-mortgage-backed bond market, but it is still a large amount to be sold at one time and a potentially troubling sign for the broader mortgage-backed bond market.


In a separate matter, Bear, a feisty company run with a hands-on approach by Chairman and Chief Executive James Cayne, has also been arguing with other hedge funds over its trading desk's dealings in the mortgage-backed securities market. In part because it is exposed to the mortgage-bond business, Bear is expected by analysts to report a 6% drop in fiscal second-quarter earnings today, compared with a year earlier.

Bids for the sale of bonds are due at 10 a.m. EDT today -- shortly after Bear announces its results.

Late Tuesday, Wall Street traders began circulating a list of mortgage assets that Bear had put on the block, according to email exchanges reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. On the list were roughly 150 of the funds' most easily traded, investment-grade bonds, which are backed by subprime mortgages. The estimated value of the bonds ranges from $1 million to nearly $110 million apiece.

Yesterday, Bear directors convened for a regularly scheduled board meeting, during which they were briefed on the fund's performance and outlook. Two people familiar with the situation said if the sale isn't a success, the Enhanced Leverage Fund could ultimately be shut down.

Bear's Limited Exposure

The Bear fund, which was down 23% in value in the year through April, has more than $6 billion in assets. Bear's own exposure to it is limited. The firm and some of its executives have invested just $40 million in the fund, meaning Bear isn't likely to be hit deeply by losses if the fund's problems mount.


Other investors include wealthy individuals and other hedge funds. It is run by Ralph Cioffi, a Bear mortgage-bond veteran.

The mortgage-bond market has been a key source of profit for Wall Street, which has gone beyond simply packaging and trading these bonds to owning subprime lenders themselves and starting up hedge funds that focus on the sector.

After several years of playing heavily in the market for subprime mortgages, players like Bear now contend with falling home prices and a rise in late or missed payments on some of the shakiest mortgages. Investor concerns about these developments have led them to sell some mortgage-backed bonds, putting downward pressure on portfolios like the one run by Bear.

Bear isn't alone. Early last month, the Swiss bank UBS AG shut down Dillon Read Capital Management, an internal hedge fund, after bad trades in mortgages led to a $124 million loss.

Lots of Leverage

The Bear fund, only 10 months old, is highly levered, meaning that in addition to raising money from investors, it borrows heavily to fund its investments.

Launched last year, the fund quickly raised more than $600 million in investments, much of which was put toward the purchase of mortgage-backed securities.

Combined with around $6 billion in borrowing from a dozen major Wall Street players, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Bank of America Corp., it has assets in excess of $6 billion. Goldman and Bank of America declined to comment. The sister fund, which uses less leverage, was launched four years ago and goes by a similar name, High-Grade Structured Credit Strategies Fund.

A person familiar with the situation said the fund is liquidating positions to free up cash for redemptions and to prepare for likely margin calls. A margin call is when a bank asks for repayment of its loans or more collateral as its borrowers' investments fall in value.

Last month, Bear blocked some investors from taking money out of the fund.

The fund is part of Bear's internal asset-management unit.

A Rocky Quarter

Analysts are bracing for a rocky quarter and have been edging down their forecasts for the big brokerage over the past month or so, according to data provider Thomson Financial. So far this year, Bear's stock has fallen 8% compared with a rise of about 2% for the broader Dow Jones Wilshire U.S. Financial Services Index.

As for some of its peers, Goldman is up 16% so far this year and Lehman, which also has a big exposure to the mortgage market, is down 1.1%.

Bear is a bit of an anomaly on Wall Street. As financial firms like Citigroup Inc. have built their firms through acquisitions or by significantly pushing into new business lines, from insurance to retail banking, Bear remains a singular Wall Street bond house. It is known for tight cost and risk controls and has managed to avoid a major trading blowup over the years.

The latest mortgage woes seem to be hitting the broader market.

ABX's Decline

An index tied to risky subprime bonds has in recent days plunged to lows last seen in late February. Traders say the dive in the index, called the ABX, was triggered by reports of rising delinquencies and foreclosures and a steep rise in long-term bond yields.


Rising interest rates could make it more difficult for homeowners to refinance their mortgages and could send more borrowers into default. The ABX index yesterday traded at around 62.5, down from 73 a month ago and a high of 97 early in the year, according to Markit, a data firm.

"There are concerns about investment vehicles that are seeing negative returns because of their subprime exposure," said Alex Pritchartt, a mortgage-derivatives trader at UBS Securities. "If some funds try to liquidate their portfolios and sell large blocks of securities, it could cause a backup in prices and spreads."

--Aaron Lucchetti contributed to this article

online.wsj.com



To: Bill Wexler who wrote (2153)7/9/2007 7:54:39 AM
From: RockyBalboa  Respond to of 6370
 
Per today there are even more borrowers:

Chemical UNIVAR has been taken out with an impressive 36% premium by the financial buyer CVC.

Next is NUMICO which is about to receive a proposal from french Giant Danone.