Friday, January 30, 2009

# Focus on long distressed opportunity * Mortages * Bankrupt debt * Disteressed * Capital restructurings

From Paul Kedrosky:

"
John Paulson's Year-End Letter

The NYT's Dealbook has obtained a copy of John Paulson of hedge fund Paulson & Co.'s year-end letter, and it is a must-read. Paulson blew the doors off last year, heavily shorting financials, both directly and via credit default swaps, turning in 37.6% return net of fees. That is beyond outstanding in a year that destroyed many other other funds' reputations.

Looking forward to 2009, Paulson remains highly bearish. Here is his general strategy, he says, for the first half:

  • Slight short exposure to equity markets
  • Remain short financials
  • Focus on long distressed opportunity
    • Mortages
    • Bankrupt debt
    • Disteressed
    • Capital restructurings
  • Focus on strategic merger deals
  • Maintain short focus on financials, with the belief that we only perhaps half-way thru.

The letter is at the NYT."

And me:

I've read that, after TARP shifted to recapitalization, the price of Toxic Assets dropped significantly, and Paulson and a few other hedge fund managers starting buying them. I concluded from that:
1) Toxic Assets can be priced
2) Owners of TA were hoping for government intervention
3) If the government decides to buy TAs, the price and availability will magically go up
4) Hedge fund managers will buy a number of the best TAs
It looks like buying TAs is part of his strategy in that letter, but the graphics are hellish to read.
As for financials, I wonder if he sees nationalization of some banks as a real possibility. I think he's very savvy, and listen to him.
Also, I wonder what happened to his charity devoted to helping defrauded borrowers get legal help. From that, I concluded that his position is close to mine, which is that many of the worst loans were actually fraud.

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