Hedge debt buying may spur LBO market
By Dane Hamilton
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Restarting a leveraged buyout machine hobbled by the subprime mortgage collapse will take many months, but hedge funds are gearing up to inject liquidity that could spur the market, executives told the Reuters Hedge Funds and Private Equity Summit this week.
The new buyers' market for debt is likely to be dominated by established hedge and buyout firms that thrive in times of distress, including Cerberus Capital Management LP CBS.UL, Avenue Capital, Apollo Management, Oaktree Capital Partners and other multibillion dollar firms, experts said.
"A lot of the best names in distressed debt have already raised their money and the financial services area is getting a lot of attention," said Stephen Moseley, president of StepStone Group LLC, a private equity advisory firm founded by senior executives at consultants Pacific Corporate Group.
News that Citigroup Inc (C.N: Quote, Profile, Research) is preparing to sell some $12 billion in loans to a group of private equity buyers including TPG Capital LP TPG.UL, Apollo and Blackstone Group LP (BX.N: Quote, Profile, Research) could be the beginning of this trend, the experts said.
"Unless they free up capital, they are not going to be in the (loan) origination business for some time," said Josh Steiner, managing director and co-founder of Quadrangle Group. He said his media and telecom-focused buyout firm bought "a lot of distressed debt" in companies including Adelphia, Charter Communications and other names in 2002 and is considering wading into that market again.
Fueled by cheap money and ready buyers of syndicated debt, the leveraged buyout market boomed until last summer, when the subprime mortgage collapse froze debt markets. That left banks that arranged deal financing unable to sell tens of billions of dollars in LBO debt, or "leveraged loans," stalling their ability to arrange new deals.
Now after billions of dollars in write-downs on declining values for their unsold inventory of loans, banks are beginning to slash the prices -- sometimes more than 10 percent off face values. This is prompting buyers, particularly hedge funds, to start looking anew at the debt.
But some experts told the Reuters summit it will take more than just clearing out a backlog of debt to start banks' lucrative buyout machinery again. Continued...




