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1000% hedge fund wins subprime bet


               
2007 Nov 26, 9:56pm   10,979 views  33 comments

by Different Sean   follow (0)  

1000% hedge fund wins subprime bet

By James Mackintosh in London
Published: November 25 2007 22:20 | Last updated: November 25 2007 22:20

A Californian hedge fund has made more than 1,000 per cent return this year by betting against US subprime home loans, making it one of the world's best-performing funds of all time.

Lahde Capital, set up in Santa Monica last year by Andrew Lahde, last week passed the 1,000 per cent mark, after fees, following the latest leg of the credit market turmoil. The fall in the value of subprime-linked securities has boosted a group of funds which spotted the problems in advance.

The decision to use derivatives to short, or bet against, low-quality US home loans taken by a select group of hedge funds last year appears to have become the most profitable single trade of all time, making well over $20bn in total so far this year. John Paulson's New York-based Paulson & Co, the biggest of the group with $28bn under management, is said by investors to have made $12bn profit from the trade already.

However, Mr Lahde, whose fund is one of the smallest specialists shorting subprime, has now begun to return money to investors, telling them in a letter: “The risk/return characteristics are far less attractive than in the past.”

In his letter, Mr Lahde said he expected the collapse in value of subprime mortgage-linked securities to be repeated for bonds backed by commercial property loans in a deep recession – which he also predicts.

“Our entire banking system is a complete disaster,” he wrote. “In my opinion, nearly every major bank would be insolvent if they marked their assets to market.” He also said he would be putting some of his own profits into gold and other precious metals.

Mr Lahde has used the phenomenal returns to boost his business, launching a fund to bet against commercial real estate this autumn – which made 42 per cent in its first two months – and is in the process of creating a third fund to short credits with a broader mandate.

Lahde's first fund, US Residential Real Estate Hedge V Class A, soared 712.8 per cent in the year to the end of October, before this month's sell-off pushed it past the 1,000 per cent mark.

There is no reliable data on how many other funds have made 1,000 per cent, or ten times the investment, in a year. But RAB Capital, London hedge fund manager, shot to prominence in 2003 when it returned 1,475.5 per cent in its Special Situations fund, which now runs $2.4bn and is the biggest shareholder in troubled bank Northern Rock.

Bigger subprime top performers include Paulson's Credit Opportunities fund, up 550.8 per cent to the end of October, and the Subprime Credit Strategies fund run jointly by Texas-based Hayman Capital and Corriente Advisors, up 526.5 per cent.

Thoughts?

#housing

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1   DinOR   @   2007 Nov 26, 11:28pm  

No problem. All we need to do is talk Mr. Lahde into opening a bank! (One that IS solvent btw). We'll call it Lah-de-dah Savings and Trust.

Since most lenders have lost 90% of their market cap his returns from his short positions have to a large extent covered the damages. Meet your new banker.

2   Duke   @   2007 Nov 27, 12:27am  

This is a weird experience, watching a very slow motion train wreck. The super-SIV idea, the mortgage freeze idea, mothballing homes, weakening the dollar. Everything is designed to buy time so that the fire-sale won't happen. But there is simply no derailing the asset repricing express, and its not just housing.
The credit bubble has created unhealthy valuations virtually everywhere. The economy needs this recession. Badly. Just to bring sanity back to life.
Debt is not wealth. Hard work, saving, and wise investing are wealth.

Once the Joneses are not given their MEW, credit cards, and easy access to serial bankruptcy they are going to be a lot easier to keep up with.

Hedge funds betting against the lending industry. You betcha!

3   Boom2Bust.com   @   2007 Nov 27, 12:29am  

One NY hedge fund manager is warning that we'll see something similar to the Great Depression very soon:

A Wall Street superstar this year who runs Balestra Capital Partners, Jim Melcher, says he's "worried about a recession. Not a normal one, but a very bad one. The worst since the 1930s. I expect we'll see clear signs of it in six months with a dramatic slowdown in the gross domestic product."

Talk of Worst Recession Since the 1930s
http://www.nysun.com/article/66268

4   DinOR   @   2007 Nov 27, 12:45am  

"a lot easier to keep up with"

Yes it will. Duke, I agree. It's all about buying time right now. Puttin' the "freeze" on loans, the whole Maryanne. It will be interesting to see if indeed the HF's take an interest in filling the void created by 189 imploded lenders? They'll have to do "something" with all those profits!

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