Daily Archives: August 24, 2018


Landmark Kentucky Pension Case Against KKR, Blackstone, and PAAMCO to Move to Trial?

Naked Capitalism has the article Landmark Kentucky Pension Case Against KKR, Blackstone, and PAAMCO to Move to Trial?

We’ve posted before on Mayberry v. KKR, a potentially trail-blazing case in which beneficiaries of the destitute Kentucky Retirement System are suing three major fund managers, KKR, Blackstone, and PAAMCO, over dedicated hedge funds they created that promised high returns at low risk only to perform worse than cash. As we will discuss shortly, the parties to the litigation had a hearing yesterday over the defendants’ motions to dismiss. The judge is expected to rule in two weeks. Former Kentucky Retirement Systems trustee Chris Tobe attended the hearing and based on that and his knowledge of the case, thought it was likely to proceed.

Imagine if people like Mitt Romney were required to pay back the money they stripped from their victims. Imagine if they were unable to convince the government to bail them out. Well, that would be enough managing for one day, or maybe for one year.


Wolf Richter: Here Comes the Second Wave of Big Money in the “Buy-to-Rent” Scheme

Naked Capitalism has the article Wolf Richter: Here Comes the Second Wave of Big Money in the “Buy-to-Rent” Scheme.

The first wave came during the housing bust when large private-equity firms acquired tens of thousands of single-family homes out of foreclosure for cents on the dollar. The biggest players have since been sold off to the public as REITs, such as Blackstone’s Invitation Homes which owns about 48,000 rental houses.

Blackstone was the trailblazer in financializing rents. It issued the first rent-backed structured securities in November 2013. This has become a common funding mechanism. And shortly before the Invitation Homes IPO, it obtained Fannie Mae guarantees for $1 billion in rental-home mortgage-backed securities.

This second wave is different. PE firms are paying prices at the peak of the market, amid ceaseless complaints that there isn’t enough inventory of homes for sale, for folks who actually want to live in the homes they buy.

I knew the capitalists would figure out some way to “save” the real-estate market.

All those foreclosed homes and evicted people needing homes. There had to be some way for capitalism to put that supply to use to satisfy the demand. Financializing rent payments was the only logical thing to do in the current heyday of rentier capitalists.