By Sean Farrell,
A fund managed by the US private equity giant Carlyle Group has become
the latest to be hit by demands from lending banks making calls on
loans secured on mortgage bonds.
Carlyle Capital Corp, a publicly traded fund that holds $21.7bn
(£10.8bn) of securities, said it had received a default notice from one
of its lending banks and expected at least one more after it failed to
meet demands for extra security from jittery counterparties.
The Guernsey-based fund has struggled to meet more than $60m of margin
calls and demands for extra collateral since the start of the month. It
met the calls until Wednesday, when it was landed with more than $37m
of demands and missed four out of seven calls.
John Stomber, the chief executive of Carlyle Capital, said
counterparties were demanding margin prices that did not represent the
underlying recoverable value of the fund's assets. Carlyle Capital's
investments are all AAA-rated securities issued by Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, the US-Government-sponsored mortgage finance agencies.
"This disconnect has created instability and variability in our repo
financing arrangements," he added. "Management is actively working with
the company's repo counterparties to develop more stable financing
terms."
The return demanded for agency mortgage bonds over 10-year US
Treasuries has widened to the highest for 22 years, according to
Bloomberg.
Tumult in the credit markets as asset values of all but the safest of
debt plummet is prompting lenders to investment funds to demand
ever-greater security for their loans, forcing funds into crisis even
if they claim the underlying assets are sound. Carlyle Capital's woes
come after Peloton, a London-based hedge fund, was forced to liquidate
its two funds and shut down because 14 lending banks had pulled credit
lines.
William O'Donnell, a UBS government bond strategist, said markets were
"utterly unhinged".
Margin calls also hit Thornburg Mortgage, a US lender, whose shares
plunged yesterday after its failure to meet a call triggered defaults
under other loan agreements. JPMorgan made the $28m call on a $320m
loan to Thornburg, which has run short of cash at least twice since
late August.
The Carlyle fund raised about $300m by selling shares in July and then
used loans to buy the $21.7bn of securities. Carlyle Capital said it
had sold almost $1bn of non-residential mortgage-backed assets to
improve liquidity and reduce leverage since the credit crunch started
in August. Carlyle Group has provided a $150m credit line to the fund,
which is the limit of its exposure. Carlyle Capital reassured investors
as recently as Monday that it had $2.4bn of undrawn credit lines.
Carlyle Group listed the fund on the Amsterdam Euronext exchange in
July when the US sub-prime mortgage crisis was already gripping the
market. It had to trim the IPO from a planned $400m and reduce the
price of the shares.
Carlyle Group has more than $75bn under management In the 1990s, its
advisers included John Major, the former prime minister, and George
Bush, the former US president.
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
Subscribe 4 Updates
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Carlyle hedge fund default sends shiver through credit markets
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||


![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)