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Hedge Fund Canyon Partners Readies War Chest for the Right Market Moment

Hedge Fund Canyon Partners Readies War Chest for the Right Market Moment

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Canyon Partners’s top executive says the hedge fund has a large cash position waiting on the sidelines, ready to be put to work after a sell-off.

The Los Angeles-based firm is “significantly under-invested” with capacity to deploy capital when prices become more reasonable, Canyon’s co-Chief Executive Officer Joshua Friedman said in an interview with Bloomberg TV’s Erik Schatzker in Davos, Switzerland. In the current environment where rates and spreads are low, the new issue market is “particularly unattractive,” he said.

Friedman, who correctly projected the sell-off in 2018 amid rising rates, said this year will bring more volatility, a “sawtooth of ups and downs” in credit. When there’s an adjustment in the market that’s sudden and sharp, “you want to have a shopping list and cash ready to go to take advantage of it,” said Friedman, who is also a co-founder of Canyon. “Sometimes the best names produce the biggest discounts or the best discounts for the risk” you’re taking, he said.

Market Panic

Canyon invested between $1.5 billion to $2 billion in bank debt and equities in December. That money was deployed not only in the secondary market, but directly to help banks relieve themselves from obligations at a discount or with issuers to close a deal, Friedman said. In a volatile credit market, bank debt is more resilient, but high-yield bonds give investors a better total return opportunity when you find a forced seller, he said.

At the top of Friedman’s list of concerns is the adverse market reaction that can occur when the Federal Reserve raises rates again, creating panic and an imbalance between supply and demand, he said. He also worries about the “mountain” of BBB rated debt that could get downgraded and affect the high-yield universe.

Canyon started to invest in utility giant PG&E Corp., which is making preparations for a bankruptcy filing as soon as next week. The situation is interesting for debt holders, but still in early stages, Friedman said. It’s going to be “a very long ball game," similar to multibillion-dollar bankruptcies like Lehman Brothers and the ongoing restructuring of Puerto Rico. “We’ve dipped our toe” in PG&E, Friedman said, declining to comment further on the extent to which the firm is involved. We’ll have to wait and see as it takes place, he said.

The fund has also spent time looking at General Electric Co., but finds the story is difficult to fully unpack. "It’s very hard to look at the debt and see enough return in it today to pay for the opacity of the situation," Friedman said. The debt isn’t cheap enough to be “particularity interesting at this point,” he said.

Canyon hasn’t been involved in Sears Holdings Corp., which is going through a Chapter 11 restructuring, but there may be opportunities down the road, Friedman said.

--With assistance from Erik Schatzker.

To contact the reporters on this story: Katherine Doherty in New York at kdoherty23@bloomberg.net;John Gittelsohn in Los Angeles at johngitt@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Rick Green at rgreen18@bloomberg.net, ;Margaret Collins at mcollins45@bloomberg.net, Nikolaj Gammeltoft, Josh Friedman

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