Exclusive:
Billionaire Lasry's junk fund stops voluntary reporting
of asset levels
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[January 12, 2016]
By Tim McLaughlin and Svea Herbst-Bayliss
BOSTON (Reuters) - A junk bond fund run by
billionaire Marc Lasry's Avenue Capital Management, which has
experienced heavy investment losses and investor withdrawals, has
stopped voluntarily reporting daily asset figures to the mutual fund
industry's top two tracking firms.
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Research chiefs for Morningstar and Lipper said on Monday they had
not received daily asset under management figures from the Avenue
Credit Strategies Fund <ACSBX.O> since about mid-December. The fund
is not required to report the figures, but not doing so is "very
unusual," said Jeff Tjornehoj, head of Americas research for Lipper,
a Thomson Reuters unit.
Avenue Capital's decision to stop reporting asset levels to the
widely followed research firms happened on the heels of the biggest
blow up in the mutual fund industry since the 2008 financial crisis.
People familiar with the situation said outflows from the Avenue
Capital fund had become a distraction after an unrelated junk bond
fund run by Third Avenue Capital Management imploded in early
December. Junk bond investors already were on edge, pulling $3.6
billion from high-yield funds in November, according to Morningstar
data.
Avenue Capital's fund was particularly hard hit after Third Avenue
said on Dec. 9th it was liquidating its Focused Credit Fund.
Investors reacted by yanking $262 million from the Avenue Capital
fund during the first two weeks of December, according to Lipper
data.
"Our fund investors receive all key information on the fund, either
directly or through our website," a spokesman for Avenue Capital
Management said. The fund also continues to report its daily net
asset value to the independent research firms.
But the research firms cannot calculate a fund's flows - investor
deposits and withdrawals - unless they have asset levels.
"We calculate flows in-house so if we don't have assets, we won't
have flows," said Annette Larson, senior research analyst at
Morningstar.
The Avenue Credit Strategies Fund has lost about 40 percent of its
$1.2 billion in assets since the end of October. The fund currently
has about $650 million to $700 million in assets, with about 15
percent in cash holdings and less than 5 percent in illiquid
investments, according to people familiar with the situation.
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The Avenue Capital fund's total return of minus 13.35 percent in
2015 was worse than 98 percent of high-yield peers, according to
Morningstar data. So far in 2016, the fund's total return is minus
1.49 percent.
But the fund has been able to meet investor redemption requests and
has plenty of cash to find some bargains in a battered sector.
It is standard for mutual funds to voluntarily report asset levels
to Morningstar and Lipper on a regular basis, as they are seen as
independent clearinghouses for calculating investor withdrawals and
deposits, and performance figures.
The Avenue Credit Strategies Fund had been reporting assets under
management on a daily basis, but then stopped after Dec. 14,
Morningstar's Larson said.
(Reporting by Tim McLaughlin and Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by
Peter Cooney and Michael Perry)
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