Wednesday, February 20, 2008

KKR Financial Delays Repayments, Starts Negotiations

(Bloomberg) -- KKR Financial Holdings LLC, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co.'s only publicly traded fixed-income fund, delayed repaying debt a second time in six months after failing to find buyers for commercial paper backed by mortgages.

Lenders to the fund agreed to the delay as KKR Financial seeks to restructure, the San Francisco-based company said yesterday in a regulatory filing. KKR Financial, whose stock has fallen 50 percent in the past year, didn't say how much debt is affected.

The announcement rekindled concerns that the decline in the market for short-term asset-backed debt, which totaled $1.2 trillion in August, will accelerate after a rebound early last month. Assets fell to $796 billion in the week ended Feb. 13, the third weekly drop. Standard & Poor's downgraded ratings on notes issued by KKR Pacific Funding Trust last week, citing uncertain pricing on the AAA rated securities that support them.

``The picture is getting worse and worse,'' said Felix Freund, who helps manage the equivalent of $14.7 billion of fixed-income securities at Frankfurt-based Union Investment GmbH. KKR Financial's second repayment extension ``shows there is still a lot of levered investments in the credit market that we can't see.''

About half the debt will be due by March 3 instead of Feb. 15, with the rest owed on March 25, according to the filing.

The talks come less than six months after the fund received a $230 million cash infusion from investors following losses on residential mortgages in the wake of the U.S. subprime crisis. The fund, led by Chief Executive Officer Saturnino Fanlo, raised a further $270 million in a rights offering with some of New York-based KKR's own partners buying shares in it, which had $19 billion of assets at the end of December.

Repricing `Driver'

The deferral drove investors to seek the security of government debt, sending 10-year Japanese bonds to the biggest gain in two weeks while perceived corporate risk in Asia and Europe soared. Contracts on Europe's Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of 50 companies with mostly high-yield credit ratings increased 26.5 basis points to 611.5 today, according to Deutsche Bank AG. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

``The driver behind the current repricing is KKR Financial Holdings delaying repayment of CP for the second time,'' analysts led by Mark Harmer, head of credit research at ING Groep NV, said in a note to clients today.

KKR Financial fell 30 cents, or 2.1 percent, to $14.23 at 11:44 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Zoe Watt, a spokeswoman for KKR in London, declined to comment.

IPO

Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, the New York-based investment firm run by Henry Kravis and George Roberts, raised $800 million in KKR Financial's initial public offering in June 2005, selling the shares for $24 apiece. The fund raised money by selling commercial paper to invest in mortgages. It sold almost half of its mortgage loans in August as prices on bonds linked to U.S. home loans started to drop, leaving it with about $5.3 billion of mortgages.

Both Kravis and Roberts sit on KKR Financial's six-member investment committee, alongside KKR Partner Scott Nuttall, KKR Financial's Fanlo and Chief Operating Officer David Netjes.

Kravis and Roberts started the firm with Jerome Kohlberg, their colleague from Bear Stearns Cos., in 1976. Kohlberg left in 1987 and started his own buyout group, Kohlberg & Co. LLC. The private-equity business owns more than 42 companies with more than $180 billion of annual revenue and about 800,000 workers around the world. The firm's investments range from Alliance Boots Ltd. in the U.K. to Texas power producer TXU Corp., now known as Energy Future Holdings Corp.
 

U.S. Stocks Climb, Erasing Earlier Drop; Hewlett-Packard Gains

 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks rose, led by technology and bank shares, after Hewlett-Packard Co.'s profit topped estimates and investor William Ackman proposed a restructuring of bond insurers in an effort to minimize credit losses.

Hewlett-Packard, the biggest maker of personal computers, climbed the most in two years and helped the Dow Jones Industrial Average erase a 109-point drop. Wells Fargo & Co. and Citigroup Inc. led financial shares to their steepest gain in a week on Ackman's plan. TJX Cos., owner of the T.J. Maxx and Marshalls discount chains, led a rally in retailers after posting profit that topped analysts' estimates.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Index gained 2.41 points, or 0.2 percent, to 1,351.19 at 12:57 p.m. in New York. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 12.45, or 0.1 percent, to 12,349.67. The Nasdaq Composite Index increased 6.9, or 0.3 percent, to 2,313.1. About four stocks rose for every three that fell on the New York Stock Exchange.

Stocks dropped earlier in the day on concern competition will reduce profits among wireless networks and faster inflation will keep the Federal Reserve from cutting interest rates.

Hewlett-Packard rose $3.33 to $47.28 First-quarter net income increased 38 percent to $2.13 billion, or 80 cents a share, from $1.55 billion, or 55 cents, a year ago. Excluding expenses for acquisitions, profit was 86 cents a share, five cents more than the average analyst estimate in a Bloomberg survey. The company also raised its annual sales forecast on increasing demand overseas.

Tech Rally

Technology companies in the S&P 500 added 1.3 percent as a group, the steepest advance among 10 industries.

Wells Fargo, the biggest bank on the West coast, climbed 67 cents to $30.53. Citigroup added 39 cents to $25.71.

Ackman distributed a plan to restructure bond insurers that may prevent dividends from being paid to the parent companies and minimize losses for holders of asset-backed securities.