Wilbur Ross made a fortune buying steel companies when no one else wanted them. He is now investing in mortgage servicers.
By LOUISE STORY
Almost two centuries ago, as Napoleon marched on Waterloo, a scion of the Rothschilds banking dynasty is said to have declared: The time to buy is when blood is running in the streets.
Now, as red ink runs on Wall Street, the figurative heirs of the Rothschilds - bankers, traders, hedge fund gurus and takeover artists - are plotting to profit from today’s financial upheaval.
These market opportunists - vulture investors is the Wall Street term - have begun to swoop. They are buying up mortgages of hard-pressed homeowners, the bank loans of cash-short businesses, and companies that seem to be hurtling toward bankruptcy. And they are trying to buy them all on the cheap.
One Wall Street specialist in so-called distressed debt recently spent at least $450 million for assets of Thornburg Mortgage, the battered mortgage servicing company. Others are buying beatendown corporate bonds and looking at car and credit card loans.
A former executive of the Countrywide Financial Corporation, one of the mortgage giants that fostered subprime lending, recently helped start a company - to buy mortgages. And executives of the Blackstone Group, those lords of the now faded buyout boom, just raised $10.
9 billion from investors to scoop up real estate.
The vultures are betting, and betting big, that some people have thrown the good out with the bad, and that the prices of some investments have simply fallen too far. But even many of the vultures warn that the worst is not over for the markets or the broader economy. The investors say that they are spotting deals that are good values and that their footsteps do not always track the broader economy.
Opportunity investing, as the trade is politely known, takes nerve: the best time to buy is when others panic or are forced to sell something they wish they could keep.
And the moment to buy is often clear only in hindsight. Even supposedly savvy traders, as well as cash-rich investors from the Middle East and Asia, have lost big in recent months by jumping into the markets too early. Among the most prominent is the billionaire investor Joseph Lewis, who lost a reported $1.19 billion when Bear Stearns collapsed last month.
“The only time you really know you’ve reached the bottom is when you’re back on the other side and things are going back up,’’ said Wilbur L. Ross Jr., a dean of vulture investing, who made a fortune buying steel companies when no one else seemed to want them.
Such caution aside, his firm, W. L. Ross & Company, recently spent $2.6 billion for two mortgage servicers and a bond insurance company.
He said he planned to buy more as hedge funds and other investors sell at bargain prices.
Some deep-pocketed investors are following his lead. Wealthy individuals, endowments and pension funds are giving the vultures billions of dollars to invest.
Last year, as the mortgage crisis erupted and then ripped through the credit markets, about $21 billion flowed into hedge funds that specialize in distressed investments - just over $1 out of every $10 flowed into those loosely regulated investment vehicles, according to Hedge Fund Research.
“There are a lot of dead carcasses on the road, and the vultures are out sniffing, said Andy Kessler, a former hedge fund manager. “This is the cycle of Wall Street. When bubbles crash, you get the value guys who come in and say, ‘This thing is cheap.’
To some, Wall Street looks like a big bargain basement. All kinds of financial assets are selling for a fraction of what they were only months ago. The average corporate loan, for example, fetches less than 90 cents on the dollar in the secondary, or resale, market. Some mortgage bonds sell for pennies on the dollar.
It is no surprise more hedge funds and private equity firms are getting into distressed investing given the outlook for the economy, said Abraham Gulkowitz, a portfolio manager at FrontPoint, the hedge fund business within Morgan Stanley.
“A lot of companies are under stress, Mr. Gulkowitz said. “When you have more and more companies under stress, suddenly by force everyone becomes a distressed investor.
Mr. Ross is already planning a reshaping of the mortgage industry.
He said he would use his mortgage servicing companies - Option One and a unit of American Home Mortgage - to expand into mortgage origination and eventually to purchase loans.He predicts huge consolidation in the troubled bond reinsurance business, where he will play a role through Assured Guaranty. He paid $1 billion for a stake in Assured a few weeks ago.
Some longtime vulture investors, however, said they were waiting for prices to get even cheaper. “There aren’t many great bargains around, said David A. Tepper, founder of Appaloosa Management, a hedge fund in New Jersey that is a major investor in the auto parts company Delphi.
When asked about mortgage assets, he said, “The fact that things are distressed or down doesn’t mean that they’re cheap or good buys. For now, many investors have a “buried optimism’’ about distressed assets, said Mark Patterson, chairman of MatlinPatterson Global Advisers, which bought substantial assets from Thornburg Mortgage. His firm made hundreds of millions of dollars purchasing distressed bonds from WorldCom during the last economic downturn.
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