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Seneca

@cornbreadereum

aum = skin

Republic of Mauritius Inscrit le Ocak 2018
954 Abonnements127 Abonnés
Seneca
Seneca@cornbreadereum·
@junkbondinvest Wrong fund, far smaller scale than flagship Opportunities fund. Oaktree Special Situations series is a distress-for control, private equity strategy. In line @grok ?
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junkbondinvestor
junkbondinvestor@junkbondinvest·
Two pitches happening in credit markets simultaneously: > Private credit: Low defaults, stable income, let's get into 401ks > Oaktree: Largest distressed fund ever, opportunity set has never been bigger These are descriptions of the same borrower pool.
junkbondinvestor tweet media
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Restructuring__
Restructuring__@Restructuring__·
Funny because it is true
Restructuring__ tweet media
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Job Lane XV
Job Lane XV@JobLaneUSA·
@zerohedge Glad I used Ancestry, although they’re probably selling my genetic profile too.
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zerohedge
zerohedge@zerohedge·
*23ANDME LAWYER: FIRM EXPECTS MULTIPLE BIDS FOR GENETIC DATA
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Naval
Naval@naval·
Upcoming deregulation wave will create an economic sonic boom.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
America is a nation of builders Soon, you will be free to build
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Naval
Naval@naval·
So, who’s been in charge all along?
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Seneca
Seneca@cornbreadereum·
Bruce Richards@Bruce_Markets

1st Time Ever, CLO Market For the first time ever in the history of the U.S. CLO market an interesting dynamic has emerged. CLO new issue volume is at a record levels, YET the size of the CLO market has declined. This table below illustrates 10-years of history; however, one can go all the way back to 1990 (first CLO ever issued) to see that this is indeed a first. Negative net issuance despite record primary issue occurred as seasoned/older CLOs that are past their reinvestment period are amortizing or being liquidated, either into the open market (BWIC) or used to form new CLO from the same manager. Demand for CLO tranches starts with the AAA tranche since it is ~60% of the capital structure. AAA demand is rock solid, led by large U.S. & Japanese banks, global insurance companies, and the new kid on the block: Janus’ CLO ETF (JAAA) which has grown to $10B, creating an additional bid for AAAs. As a result, CLO liabilities have tightened, which is accretive for CLO equity investors. CLO managers employ teams of investment professionals that are experts in underwriting each BSL, building and managing a highly diversified portfolio with an enduring credit profile to maintain low default rates, and avoiding CCCs, a bifurcation that drives default rates. Cash flow distributions to CLO equity investors benefit from tighter CLO liabilities, the return generated during the warehouse period as the CLO ramps, +reinvestment during the investment period, +active management that adds alpha via relative value generated by CLO manager, +repricing and extensions of CLO liabilities later in the CLO life span. Today, CLO equity holders are earning their highest cash distribution in years, resulting in mid-teens IRRs, strong DPI and MOICs. I believe this dynamic will continue to be net-positive for world-class CLO managers, who have proven incredibly adept managing through the cycles. The kicker is when the CLO manager shares a portion (10-20%) of its management fees that it earns from managing the CLO (~40 bps) with the CLO equity holders. This fee sharing arrangement was first introduced post-GFC when CLO managers raised CLO equity funds required under risk-retention requirements known as The Volcker Rule. Since the Volker rule is no longer applied to U.S. CLOs, fee sharing arrangements are less prevalent today, but available from select managers. Conclusion: The technical condition that exists today, with tight liabilities and net-negative primary issuance, yet robust new issue supply and improving credit dynamics represents a unique opportunity for CLO equity.

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KKGB
KKGB@INArteCarloDoss·
You know what’s back? CLOs are back. There are now over $ 1 trillion in US CLOs and Europe is having an issuance bonanza, with a quarter trillion already issued. For those who were not around last time, these are same vibes as CDOs: garbage pooled together and given a rating upgrade.
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Tobias Maximus
Tobias Maximus@tmaxftw·
@zerohedge Endless Shrimp was a 0% interest rate phenomenon
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Randy Woodward
Randy Woodward@TheBondFreak·
@unusual_whales A lot of corporate debt is yet to be refinanced to the current rates. They're interest payments will be going much higher.
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Win Smart, CFA
Win Smart, CFA@WinfieldSmart·
CTAs are long $165 billion of global equities, the most long they’ve been in 3 years
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Special Situations 🌐 Research Newsletter (Jay)
After hotter than expected CPI and PPI, bond yields are ripping: 5Y at 4.31%, up 9 bps 10Y at 4.32%, up 8 bps 30Y at 4.46%, up 4 bps Mortgage rates going higher
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Randy Woodward
Randy Woodward@TheBondFreak·
This HAS to be a "markets got it wrong" damage control.
Randy Woodward tweet media
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Seneca
Seneca@cornbreadereum·
@DiMartinoBooth Did anyone mention corporate maturity walls and deterioration of interest coverage ratios at the presser? K
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Danielle DiMartino Booth
Danielle DiMartino Booth@DiMartinoBooth·
…as duly reflected in real rates rising. ENJOY the bankruptcy cycle!
hoosjoesmith✝️@hoosjimsmith

@Stimpyz1 @DiMartinoBooth @brandon_bohr @Thedude69750960 @cvpayne @rebeccawalser @profplum99 @AliciaLevinePhD Yeah, I'm not sure where all this "JPo got religion" stuff is coming from. All these guys are cut from same cloth. Danielle literally the only fed official, former or otherwise, who I truly believe is not a member of that school Release the doves, indeed. That's what we got 2day

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Seneca
Seneca@cornbreadereum·
@SamanthaLaDuc Spot on. + Any good CFO is looking to refinance 12-18 months ahead of maturity wall
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Samantha LaDuc
Samantha LaDuc@SamanthaLaDuc·
Shocking how fast the narrative has turned from DISINFLATION to DEFLATION and RATE CUTS to get borrowing costs down quickly enough to limit financial and economic hard landing for debt-strapped companies. "The volumes of debt coming due start stepping up in the second quarter of 2025, but companies may be under pressure to begin ramping up issuance a year before, to lock in funding and reduce the risk of credit rating downgrades." bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
Samantha LaDuc@SamanthaLaDuc

Shocking how fast the narrative has turned from DISINFLATION to DEFLATION as oil and yields have crashed form highs. And now this: #OOTT $WTIC #OPEC finance.yahoo.com/news/oil-price…

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Seneca
Seneca@cornbreadereum·
@Cashflowplz @zerohedge Which is far from industry standard, who rely on 3rd party valuations. How this is possible? Question remains
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Seneca
Seneca@cornbreadereum·
@bradleyjohnson2 @rev_cap well said on all fronts. esp vintage yr and 18-21' underwriting defaults. but distressed flagships are already rolling. interest coverage ratios eroding and 3y investment period should be sweet spot with 24-26' maturity walls.
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Brad Johnson
Brad Johnson@bradleyjohnson2·
It's like any other private asset class. - returns are good with top tier GPs - vintage year really matters - "volatility laundering" makes it more attractive to a large subset of LPs Guessing there will be a big uptick defaults on 2018-2021 loans, which will dramatically lower the double digit returns they are quoting today, but newer funds should do well given reduced valuations and tighter covenants. Distressed credit funds will start popping up next year and should do well, but those are IRR driven vs. yield (different investment goal).
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Seneca
Seneca@cornbreadereum·
@josephwang How about a chart highlighting the erosion of interest coverage ratios below 1.0x for B- rated corporate issuers ?
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Seneca
Seneca@cornbreadereum·
@choffstein Often overlooked - A strategy with a low correlation <0.20 to the overall portfolio, can have a very high std. deviation and volatility profile.. and can still lower the std. deviation of the overall portfolio. Also, Sortino > Sharpe
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Corey Hoffstein 🏴‍☠️
if you're designing a multi-alternative strategy, the design you’d select to maximize the sharpe on a standalone basis versus the design you’d choose to to maximize the sharpe of the stock/bond portfolio it's added to would be different. i think about that a lot.
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