From Wolf Street, August 31:
“Valuation uncertainties.” And the trail of the Windhorst bonds.
H2O Asset Management — a UK-based hedge fund, majority-owned by French investment bank Natixis — just gated a series of its funds due to illiquidity of its holdings. On Friday evening, France’s chief market regulator, Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF), instructed the firm to close three of its funds due to “valuation uncertainties” resulting from their exposure to unlisted securities linked to the controversial German financier Lars Windhorst.....MORE
Besides the three funds indicated by AMF, H2O closed another five funds containing holdings of similarly illiquid assets, with the result that roughly half of the asset management firm’s entire portfolio of assets — €21.7 billion, according to the company’s website — is now under wraps. Trapped investors cannot access their funds, and will be unable to do so for at least the next four weeks, during which time the company will try to sell off the illiquid assets.
Natixis — itself owned by Groupe BPCE, France’s second largest banking group — insists that whatever happens at H2O will have “no financial impact” on its own balance sheet or income statement. Natixis has enough problems of its own to deal with, having suffered significant trading losses in the second quarter as stocks derivatives bets went awry.
In 2015, H20 began purchasing non-rated corporate private placements. They included bonds issued by companies backed by the German entrepreneur Lars Windhorst, who in 2009 had received a suspended prison sentence for breach of trust. After leaving a trail of bankrupt companies, stiffed investors, and unpaid debts, Windhorst was accused by the German financial daily Handelsblatt of “greed, boundlessness and immoral behavior.”....
* June 18, 2019
H2O Asset Management: illiquid love | FT Alphaville
June 24, 2019
H2O Asset Management: Lars, liquidity and ... - FT AlphavilleI know the name Windhorst is German but whenever I see it I think of this, the third and least known of the 1720 scams:
So You Are Well Versed In South Sea Bubble Lore, Know Law and the Mississippi Madness But Do You Recall....
...The Dutch 'Wind-trade', which also popped and dropped during those memorable months of 1719 - 1720?