Thursday, June 21, 2007

Hedge fund future bleak with Merrill sell-off

Hedge fund future bleak with Merrill sell-off

Merrill Lynch's planned auction of about $800 million of bonds held by a money-losing Bear Stearns hedge fund could signal the end of a Bear Stearns effort to save the fund. The 10-month-old fun run by Bear Stearns senior managing director Ralph Cioffi has lost 20% this year and is under increasing pressure from creditors, including Merrill. Bear Stearns has attributed the falloff of the fund and a sister fund to the slump in the U.S. housing market.

Some Lenders Dislike Plan to Save Bear Stearns Fund
By JULIE CRESWELL and VIKAS BAJAJ

An effort to save a troubled hedge fund at Bear Stearns hit a major hurdle yesterday when Merrill Lynch signaled that it would move forward with plans to auction $850 million in subprime securities that had been held as collateral.

While negotiations are continuing and the auction could be averted, the move signaled that some lenders in the High Grade Structured Credit Strategies Enhanced Leverage fund are not happy with some terms of the Bear Stearns bailout plan.

Executives at the bank have been scrambling to shore up the fund since three lenders — Merrill, Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase — asked the bank to put up more capital. The executives had offered to inject $1.5 billion in new loans into the fund, and a consortium of other banks, including Citigroup and Barclays, would infuse $500 million in new capital.

In return, the Wall Street banks and brokerage firms that had provided nearly $6 billion to the hedge fund would have had their own exposure reduced but would have had to agree not to demand more cash or collateral from the fund for a year, according to people briefed on the plan who were not authorized to speak for attribution.

If Merrill moves forward with an auction, it could make it much more difficult for Bear Stearns and the longtime portfolio manager of the fund, Ralph Cioffi, who has spent the last few days scrambling to try to bring in new money, to save the 10-month-old fund. If other lenders decide to follow Merrill’s lead and seize and sell assets, it could lead to the dissolution of the hedge fund.
Late yesterday, some people briefed on the plan said that one option might be for Bear Stearns to buy out Merrill’s stake. Representatives at Bear Stearns and Merrill declined to comment.
But if the assets — securities and bonds backed by subprime mortgages that can be difficult to value — are sold at prices well below where they are currently valued, the reverberations across Wall Street would be strong. Not only would Merrill be forced to post losses on its holdings, but other banks, hedge funds and investors owning similar securities would have to mark down the value of those holdings to new, lower prices.

“If we end up seeing these assets sold at significantly distressed prices, it will likely cause other funds to have to re-evaluate how effective and fair the values that they have been carrying these securities have been.” said Josh Rosner, a managing director at Graham Fisher, an investment research firm in New York.

The potential for a large ripple effect across the financial markets has been one reason many of the other lenders, even those unhappy with the terms of the bailout plan, stayed at the negotiating table with Bear Stearns, according to people briefed on the talks.

Started just last year, the Bear Stearns hedge fund was hit by a combination of bad bets on bonds backed by subprime mortgages as well as high levels of leverage. Investors originally put $600 million into the fund and another $6 billion was borrowed from the Wall Street banks.

Through the end of April, the fund had lost about 23 percent, prompting investors to try to redeem their investments. In May, the fund froze redemptions and soon faced margin calls from its banks.

While Bear Stearns has little exposure to the fate of the fund — the company and individual executives invested just $40 million in it — its stock nonetheless declined 2.2 percent, to $146.79. in the last two days.

Investors are probably concerned about how the outcome could affect the larger Bear Stearns business of underwriting and trading bonds backed by mortgages.

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hedge funds, mortgage backed securities, CDO, CDS, credit derivatives, mortgage derivatives

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