SOURCE: OREGONIAN
Oregon invests heavily in Grayken's 'distressed debt' fund
By Ted Sickinger, The Oregonian
September 30, 2009, 7:25PM
The Oregon Investment Council
doubled its bet Wednesday on the profit potential of John Grayken, king
of the bare-knuckled corner of the investment industry referred to as
"distressed debt."
Lacking many of its conventional investment opportunities amid the
wreckage of last year's stock market crash and credit market
contraction, the OIC voted to invest up to $800 million more with
Grayken and his Dallas-based Lone Star Funds.
That's not only double the amount the Treasury Department's investment
staff came to the regular council meeting recommending, but was on top
of previous commitments of $1.37 billion to Lone Star Funds, $820
million of which is still invested. That makes Grayken's funds one of
the largest single managers of Oregon's $48 billion public-employee
pension fund.
Grayken, a ruddy faced 50-something who renounced his U.S. citizenship
in 1999, buys troubled loans of all flavors -- corporate, commercial
real estate, residential mortgages -- in bulk. He hopes to raise $20
billion from institutional investors for his two new distressed debt
funds.
Once the money is invested, Grayken's team of 1,000 employees does the
commercial equivalent of sending the boys 'round, either restructuring
the loan or foreclosing on the collateral as quickly as possible in
order to sell it and earn a quick return.
"It's a machine," said Nori Gerardo Lietz, a real estate consultant to the OIC
Grayken told the council his funds results wouldn't be dependent on
growth or economic recovery. "It's about getting a wholesale discount,
then selling the assets back into the market," he said.
If council members had any concern about the nature of the investments,
it was only the risk that if Grayken were incapacitated, the one-man
show would cease to function. But Lietz suggested that Grayken was
unlikely to keel over anytime soon. "I think he has ice water running
in his veins."
Past returns have been handsome -- 29 percent to investors. And
opportunity abounds today as banks, insurance companies, foundations
and other big investors look to unload billions in loans and the global
property market undergoes an unprecedented deleveraging.
Grayken told the OIC that his firm has few large competitors at the
moment. Most of the investment banks are on the sidelines, either
bankrupt or dealing with their own balance sheet problems. Many big
private equity firms are trying to unwind the real estate investments
they took on during the boom. And a shriveled credit market means that
any investor has to be willing to make deals with higher levels of
equity, not borrowed money.
Still, Grayken has been controversial. His firm ran into political and
legal problems in South Korea -- it was accused of market manipulation
-- after buying a bank. He told the OIC Wednesday that those troubles
had "blown over."
Some also questioned the ethics of the council investing state employee
pension money in a fund that aggressively forecloses on borrowers to
increase its profit margin.
"Should the OIC be giving Grayken billions that will result in a
massive wave of residential foreclosures while the Legislature and
others at the same time attempt to stem the tide of foreclosures?"
asked Bill Parish, a Portland investment adviser who regularly attends
the council's meetings.
If council members had any moral qualms, they didn't raise them at the
meeting. And state Treasurer Ben Westlund, who campaigned for his job
sponsoring mortgage reform legislation to protect consumers, seconded
the motion to double the council's proposed investment with Grayken.
Westlund didn't respond to requests for comment.
Ted Sickinger
Bill Parish
Parish & Company
10260 SW Greenburg Rd., Suite 400
Portland, OR 97223
Tel: 503-643-6999
email: bill@billparish.com