Hedge funds hunt for shipping debt in new market push
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[February 20, 2019]
By Jonathan Saul and Maiya Keidan
LONDON (Reuters) - A growing number of
hedge funds are moving into shipping debt, an asset class few have
invested in before, looking to buy up loans and bonds as banks cut their
exposure to the troubled sector.
World economy worries and cost pressures are dampening prospects for a
proper recovery in many segments of the shipping
sector, which has struggled with tough markets for a decade.
Meanwhile European banks, particularly German lenders, are trying to
offload distressed and performing loans to the industry which attracts
high capital requirements.
The European Central Bank's banking supervisor has flagged troubled
non-performing loans in 2019 as "a concern for a significant number of
euro area institutions".
In one of the first deals to have been concluded in recent weeks,
finance sources said hedge and private equity firm Avenue Capital
together with asset manager King Street Capital Management bought at
least $100 million of loans from investment groups Varde Partners and
Oak Hill Advisors.
In June last year funds managed by Varde and Oak Hill purchased $1
billion worth of legacy shipping loans - which sources said included
mainly performing but also some distressed assets - from Deutsche Bank.
Varde and Oak Hill declined to comment, while Avenue Capital and King
Street did not respond to requests for comment.
Hedge funds clocked up hundreds of millions of dollars in losses from
investments in mainly equities when the shipping industry first turned
sour a decade ago – and have made limited forays for the most part
since.
Last year some equity-focused funds bet on a recovery for the global
shipping industry through the stock and futures markets but many are now
retrenching after heavy losses in the fourth quarter.
Debt-focused funds are hoping for more luck.
"There is more hedge fund buying interest in shipping debt than in
equity now. I don't think anyone believes the (shipping) market will
recover any time soon," said Basil Karatzas of New York based shipping
finance advisory firm Karatzas Marine Advisors & Co.
"So, if you buy equities the upside potential is limited. You can more
easily make double-digit returns through credit risk investments."
Deals expected to generate hedge fund interest include a portfolio of
distressed shipping loans that Greece's Piraeus Bank is seeking to sell,
finance sources said.
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A container ship crosses the Gulf of Suez towards the Red Sea before
entering the Suez Canal, near Ismailia port city, northeast of
Cairo, Egypt October 27, 2018. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh/File Photo
A source close to the Piraeus Bank deal said the portfolio of shipping loans,
called Nemo, was made up of non-performing and performing loans with a nominal
value of 500 million to 600 million euros. The source said a sale was expected
to close in the second quarter of 2019, declining to provide any details on
potential bidders.
Other hedge funds looking at distressed loans include York Capital Management
and Cross Ocean Partners, the sources said.
A spokesman for York Capital declined to comment, while Cross Ocean Partners did
not respond to requests for comment.
Och-Ziff Capital Management was amongst the suitors for a 2.7 billion euro
distressed portfolio of shipping loans that was sold this month by ailing German
state bank NordLB, which sources said was bought by private equity firm
Cerberus.
Och-Ziff did not respond to requests for comment.
NordLB plans to wind down its remaining non-performing shipping loan portfolio
of nearly 4 billion euros almost completely by the end of the year, which
sources said is still likely to involve some loan sell-offs and expected to
generate hedge fund interest.
Germany's No.2 lender DZ Bank is also trying to offload over one billion euros
of toxic shipping loans from its troubled transport financing division DVB Bank,
although there have been multiple delays with the sales process, finance sources
said.
Others though have opted for other types of investments, viewing toxic debt as
too risky now.
"Hedge funds need to step in to shipping but it's a bit early for the distressed
cycle. It's a question of timing," said Louis Gargour, chief investment officer
at hedge fund firm LNG Capital, which has around 10 to 15 percent of its total
exposure focused on bond issuances by shipping companies.
(Additional reporting by George Georgiopoulos in Athens; editing by David Evans)
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