A publicly traded
unit of the high profile US buyout firm, the
Carlyle Group said on Thursday that lenders were
seizing its assets, sending the fund,
Carlyle Capital, into insolvency. The Carlyle Group has
close associations with the Bush family.
By yesterday the fund had defaulted on $16.6
billion of debt and said it expected to default soon
on its remaining debt. The fund's $21.7 billion in
assets were exclusively in AAA mortgage-backed
securities issued by
Federal mortgage guarantee firms Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, traditionally viewed as secure and
conservative investments, which it was using as
collateral against its loans.
Carlyle
Capital, which is based in Guernsey, in the Channel
Islands and listed on the Euronext stock exchange in
Amsterdam, on Wednesday announced that, although it has
been working diligently with its lenders, the Company
has not been able to reach a mutually beneficial
agreement to stabilize its financing. The company
expects that its lenders will promptly take possession
of substantially all of the Company’s remaining assets.
Carlyle said
that the only assets held in the company’s portfolio as
of Wednesday, were US government agency AAA-rated
residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS). During
the last seven business days, the Company received
margin calls - repayment requests or demands for more
collateral - in excess of $400 million.
"As
the Company was unable to pay these margin calls, its
lenders proceeded to foreclose on the RMBS collateral.
In total, through March 12, the Company has defaulted on
approximately $16.6 billion of its indebtedness. The
remaining indebtedness is expected soon to go into
default," Carlyle said in a
statement. "The Company
explored a variety of proposals with its lenders in an
attempt to refinance its portfolio on sustainable terms.
The Carlyle Group participated actively in those
negotiations and was prepared to provide substantial
additional capital if a successful refinancing could be
achieved. Negotiations deteriorated late on March 12
when, among other things, the pricing service utilized
by certain lenders reported a drop in the value of the
RMBS collateral that is expected to result in additional
margin calls tomorrow of approximately $97.5 million."
Carlyle
added that overall, it has become apparent to the
Company that the basis on which lenders are willing to
provide financing against the company’s collateral has
changed so substantially that a successful refinancing
is not possible.
The
lenders, headed by
Deutsche Bank and
J.P. Morgan Chase, began selling the securities
last night, according to a report in the
Wall Street Journal.
The fund was set up in August 2006 with roughly
$670 million in cash from Carlyle's owners and other
investors, and about $300 million in additional
capital raised from a public stock sale.
The capital allowed the fund to go to banks and
borrow far more, leveraging its cash investment
some
20 times into the portfolio.
Carlyle Capital stock closed at $2.80 in
Amsterdam yesterday before the announcement, off 89% from its peak.
The Wall
Street Journal says the fund's collapse shows how Wall
Street's biggest players have begun playing hardball
with some of their best clients. And they reveal how
jittery banks have become about their own loan
exposures. In the case of Carlyle, 12 banks had lent the
fund about $21 billion, or $20 for every dollar of
initial capital.
It also illustrates how the
credit crunch has moved far beyond subprime mortgages.
Carlyle Capital's portfolio consisted exclusively of
AAA-rated mortgage backed securities issued by Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac. They are considered to have the
implied guarantee of the U.S. government and pay par at
maturity.