(Bloomberg) -- Alternative asset manager Sculptor Capital Management has launched a platform to invest in the riskiest tranches of collateralized loan obligations, which will count its new owner Rithm Capital Corp. as a key investor. Most Read from Bloomberg Dubai Grinds to Standstill as Cloud Seeding Worsens Flooding Elon Wants His Money Back Singapore Loses ‘World’s Best Airport’ Crown to Qatar Record Rainfall in Dubai? Blame Climate Change, Not Cloud Seeding Red Lobster Considers Bankruptcy to Deal With Leases and Labor Costs The venture, dubbed Sculptor Loan Financing Partners, will manage investments in the equity tranches of Sculptor’s own CLOs in the US and Europe, which package leveraged loans into securities of varying risk and size. It will be part of the firm’s institutional credit strategies business, which oversees about $15 billion in assets under management, according to a statement seen by Bloomberg. Sculptor is following other firms that have pursued similar strategies over the past 18 months, setting up funds to allow them to retain the equity portions of the CLOs they manage as it got harder to sell the bonds to third parties. Alternative investment platform Sagard is fundraising a CLO equity fund, for which it already had secured anchors, while CLO manager Irradiant Partners LP raised more than $400 million last year to invest in the securities. “The new platform allows us to be nimble in accessing the CLO market when opportunities arise while continuing to scale Sculptor’s global CLO business across the US and Europe,” said Michael Nierenberg, Rithm’s chief executive officer. Read more: CLOs Face Lowest Profitability in Years, Cutting Loan Demand (1) Sculptor’s fund has already seeded one such deal: a $406 million transaction that priced in March and closed this week. A group of leading global institutions invested in the minority equity and rated notes, according to the statement. Sculptor’s latest new issue CLO comes as issuance in the $1.3 trillion market soars, with sales of new CLO bonds running about 54% higher than this time last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg News. “The significant demand we received from third-party investors for CLO 32 reinforces the benefits of our decision to launch a captive CLO equity platform,” Brett Klein, global head of corporate credit at Sculptor said in the statement. Rithm’s commitment comes a few months after the mortgage servicing company bought Sculptor following a long fight between the asset manager’s founder Dan Och and the company’s chief investment officer Jimmy Levin. The real estate investment firm finally completed the purchase in November, buying Sculptor for $720 million. In 2024, Sculptor has refinanced three CLO transactions to achieve lower capital costs. Overall, the company has issued 42 CLOs and collateralized bond obligations since 2012, according to the statement. Read more: Sculptor Deal Thrusts Obscure REIT Into Wall Street Spotlight Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek Aging Copper Mines Are Turning Into Money Pits Despite Demand What Really Happens When You Trade In an iPhone at the Apple Store For Multinationals, Africa’s Allure Is Fading The AI Chatbot That Could Transform Business School Accreditation Rents Are the Fed’s ‘Biggest Stumbling Block’ in Taming US Inflation ©2024 Bloomberg L.P.
Sculptor Launches Latest Fund to Buy Riskiest CLO Slices
You are reading a free article with opinions that may differ from the recommendation given by Kalkine in its paid research reports. Become a Kalkine member today to get access to our research reports, in-depth technical and fundamental research. Learn more
Start Your Free Trial Now!Download Free Report – Explore 3 Stock Ideas & Industry Insights
Unlock 3 stock ideas and key industry insights in our free report. This information is general in nature and does not consider your personal objectives, financial situation, or needs. It is not financial advice.
All investments involve risk—consider independent advice before making any investment decisions.
View 3 Research ReportsThis information, including any data, is sourced from Unicorn Data Services SAS, trading as EOD Historical Data (“EODHD”) on ‘as is’ basis, using their API. The information and data provided on this page, as well as via the API, are not guaranteed to be real-time or accurate. In some cases, the data may include analyst ratings or recommendations sourced through the EODHD API, which are intended solely for general informational purposes.
This information does not consider your personal objectives, financial situation, or needs. Kalkine does not assume any responsibility for any trading losses you might incur as a result of using this information, data, or any analyst rating or recommendation provided. Kalkine will not accept any liability for any loss or damage resulting from reliance on the information, including but not limited to data, quotes, charts, analyst ratings, recommendations, and buy/sell signals sourced via the API.
Please be fully informed about the risks and costs associated with trading in the financial markets, as it is one of the riskiest forms of investment. Kalkine does not provide any warranties regarding the information on this page, including, without limitation, warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose or use.
Please wait processing your request...