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Billary Buddy Marc Lasry’s Last Rodeo——The Jig Is Up On 25 Years Of Bottom Fisher Bailouts

This is a syndicated repost published with the permission of David Stockman's Contra Corner » Stockman’s Corner. To view original, click here. Opinions herein are not those of the Wall Street Examiner or Lee Adler. Reposting does not imply endorsement. The information presented is for educational or entertainment purposes and is not individual investment advice.

As the Fed’s third and last bubble of this century heads for its splatter spot, the stench of desperate crony capitalism fills the air. You can count hedge fund mogul and Billary Buddy, Marc Lasry, among the upchucking financiers.

A few months back I heard him say on bubble vision that energy debt was a “once in a lifetime opportunity”. My thought was good luck with that, but even better luck to your investors—–who will need to get out of Dodge fast.

The truth is, Lasry had it upsidedown. Energy prices over the last 15 years were carried skyward by a once in a lifetime central bank driven credit explosion. The latter fueled a surge of phony demand and a tidal wave of malinvestment——not only in oil and gas, but practically everything else in the material and manufacturing economy of the world.

The reason that 2016 will prove to be a great historical inflection point is that the central banks of the world have finally run out of dry powder. After a 20 year spree in which their balance sheets exploded by nearly 11X—–from $2 trillion to $21 trillion—-they are being forced to shutdown their printing presses.

China has to stop because it has been slammed with a $1 trillion capital flight in the last year, and it’s accelerating. The BOJ and the ECB have already shot their wad and it’s done no good at all. The Fed spent 84 months dithering on the zero bound and now it has no dry powder left as the US economy slides into recession.

Accordingly, the great global credit bubble has finally run out of new central bank fuel. It has now surely reached its apogee at about $225 trillion compared to only $40 trillion back in 1994 when oil prices were still well under $20 per barrel. And soon the world’s mountain of debt will be falling in upon itself—–starting with the cratering Red Ponzi of China.

Needless to say, the latter amounts to a sword of Damocles hanging over the world’s massively deformed and dangerously unbalanced energy markets. To wit, almost all of the increase in global oil demand since the 2008 crisis has been in China and its caravan of EM suppliers and fellow travelers.

Total global demand in 2015, in fact, averaged about 92.6 mb/d per day (liquids basis)—–up nearly 7.0 mb/d since 2008. But 4.0 mb/d of that growth was attributable to China and another 6.0 mb/d to Brazil, Korea, the petro-states and the balance of the EM economies. By contrast, oil demand in the US, Western Europe and Japan is actually down by about 3.0 mb/d since the 2008 peak, as shown below:

Now here’s the thing. While the red line above representing the Red Ponzi and its supply chain looks like its still slightly rising, it’s actually in the process of heading sharply southward. That means that in the period ahead, demand will be falling all across the planet on a sustained basis for the first time in modern history.

Moreover, that is not a forecast——it’s already happening. China’s apparent growth of 500k b/d last year was entirely due to filling its strategic reserve. But it has now run out of space—- at the very same time that its oil-using industrial economy is falling out of bed.

In fact, rail freight volume last year plunged by 10%, meaning that even China’s working commercial petroleum stocks are overflowing. The same slide in demand is obviously occurring in Brazil and throughout the EM.

Accordingly, the current 1.5 mb/d per day global surplus is just a warm-up. The global surplus is swelling toward 2-3 mb/d or even more. And prices are heading back into the $20s——a zone which was actually penetrated today for the first time since December 2003.

None of this is a mystery—–except to Wall Street gunslingers like Lasry who have become billionaires suckling on the madness of the world’s central banks. Still, last Friday when I accidentally turned on the sound during the CNBC halftime cattle call, I couldn’t believe my ears. Lasry was back saying—–

“It is now just a question of when the energy turnaround takes place in the next 3-months, 6-months or a year…….crude oil is going to be at $70 to $90 two years from now….. debt purchased at 60 cents today will be worth par, yielding 30 percent returns.”

And why was he so confident?  Well, he seemed to think that the US economy is in the pink of health!

 “I don’t think it’s a time to panic, I think it’s actually a time where you’ve got opportunities out there. Invest in solid companies and you’ll end up doing pretty well……I.don’t think we’re going into a recession, I think it’s whether we’re growing at 1 or 2 percent,” he said. “So the fact that you’ve got lower GDP, that’s fine, but at the end of the day the U.S. economy is doing fine……you saw the jobs report”.

Well, yes we did, and it was the weakest December NSA report this late in the business cycle in modern history, as we pointed out in our weekend analysis (Newsflash From The December ‘Jobs’ Report—–The US Economy Is Dead In the Water”).

But as it turns out Lasry was not playing at macro-economist after all. As we learned from Reuters last night, he was desperately shucking and jiving, trying to hide the fact that one of his major funds is suffering larger losses, huge redemptions and has stopped reporting its daily results:

 A junk bond fund run by billionaire Marc Lasry’s Avenue Capital Management, which has experienced heavy investment losses and investor withdrawals, has stopped voluntarily reporting daily asset figures to the mutual fund industry’s top two tracking firms….

Research chiefs for Morningstar and Lipper said on Monday they had not received daily asset under management figures from the Avenue Credit Strategies Fund since about mid-December……The Avenue Credit Strategies Fund has lost about 40 percent of its $1.2 billion in assets since the end of October. The fund currently has about $650 million to $700 million in assets……

The Avenue Capital fund’s total return of minus 13.35 percent in 2015 was worse than 98 percent of high-yield peers, according to Morningstar data. So far in 2016, the fund’s total return is minus 1.49 percent.

In short, what was a $2 billion fund a year ago, which bet big on busted energy debt, is now itself circling the drain.

But you would never know it from bubble vision. In a remarkably fast turn around, CNBC’s noontime host, Scott Wapner, who is apparently on the job 24/7, issued a post refuting the Reuters story hardly 30 minutes after it appeared at 11:25 PM.

A report that raises questions about a junk bond fund run by Avenue CapitalGroup is “misleading,” Avenue boss Marc Lasry has told CNBC….The fund is not required to report such data (but)……Beginning in February, Avenue will be reporting to these data services our AUM on a monthly, rather than daily, basis, similar to the practice of many funds and fund companies.

Remarkable, but revealing. Wapner has never posted a midnight before—–so the level of desperation at Avenue Capital Group must be at DEFCON 1 levels.
 

(to be continued)

 

 

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