Welcome To The Ontex Resources HUB On AGORACOM

Free
Message: Carlyle Capital: Fund is Insolvent
2
Mar 17, 2008 06:53AM
1
Mar 18, 2008 05:48AM
1
Mar 18, 2008 12:51PM

Mar 18, 2008 12:58PM
4
Mar 18, 2008 03:02PM
Carlyle Capital: Fund is Insolvent
MoneyNews
Wednesday, March 19, 2008

AMSTERDAM -- Investment company Carlyle Capital Corp said on Wednesday that its liquidators have determined the fund to be insolvent and that investors were not likely to get any proceeds after its operations wind up.
Amsterdam-listed Carlyle, which late on Tuesday asked for trade in its shares to be suspended, said in a statement that it had "extremely limited cash assets".

Carlyle Capital Corp (CCC), a separate legal and business entity from U.S. private equity firm Carlyle Group, declared itself effectively out of business 10 days ago, after its counterparties called in their loans and seized its Residential Mortgage-Backed Assets (RMBS).

Carlyle Capital had defaulted on $16.6 billion of debt.

The fund is 15 percent-owned by Carlyle Group executives and is based on the British offshore centre of Guernsey.

In a preliminary assessment of CCC's financial position, liquidators said that "all of the RMBS assets of CCC have been subject to enforcement by lending banks following default on the terms of facilities provided to CCC", Carlyle Capital said.

The fund still has "substantial liabilities" that were yet to be determined, but they were likely to exceed CCC's remaining assets making it insolvent, the fund added.

Carlyle Capital shares were down 34 percent at $0.25 at 1217 GMT (8:17 a.m. EDT). The initial public offer price 10 months ago was $19.

Carlyle Capital was hit severely by the impact of the credit crisis on leveraged investors. News of its default weighed on global markets last week.

The crisis was triggered last year when risky mortgages made to U.S. borrowers went sour putting pressure on lenders to tighten credit and making it difficult to value collateralized debt, mortgage portfolios and other fixed-income securities.

     borrowed this from vhf on stockhouse..

    One of the major global hedge funds has been officially liquidated today. This is despite the extreme efforts over the past few days to revive it. Considering the amount of clout that the Carlyle Group executives have globally, their 15% position in this fund is a substantial and shocking loss. If the elite are losing control, so much for any other group of investors.

This latest gold take-down is nothing more than complete suppression and desperation by the NY cartel. If it had any traction, the U.S.$ would be simultaneously rising and it is not. They know above anyone else that the financial game is over and are trying their best to cover their current short positions and acquire as much low cost gold as manipulatively possible. The last time we saw such an attack like this was in August and we all know that PM's entered a new and much stronger upward channel shortly after.

Regards - VHF


Carlyle Capital: Fund is Insolvent
MoneyNews
Wednesday, March 19, 2008

AMSTERDAM -- Investment company Carlyle Capital Corp said on Wednesday that its liquidators have determined the fund to be insolvent and that investors were not likely to get any proceeds after its operations wind up.
Amsterdam-listed Carlyle, which late on Tuesday asked for trade in its shares to be suspended, said in a statement that it had "extremely limited cash assets".

Carlyle Capital Corp (CCC), a separate legal and business entity from U.S. private equity firm Carlyle Group, declared itself effectively out of business 10 days ago, after its counterparties called in their loans and seized its Residential Mortgage-Backed Assets (RMBS).

Carlyle Capital had defaulted on $16.6 billion of debt.

The fund is 15 percent-owned by Carlyle Group executives and is based on the British offshore centre of Guernsey.

In a preliminary assessment of CCC's financial position, liquidators said that "all of the RMBS assets of CCC have been subject to enforcement by lending banks following default on the terms of facilities provided to CCC", Carlyle Capital said.

The fund still has "substantial liabilities" that were yet to be determined, but they were likely to exceed CCC's remaining assets making it insolvent, the fund added.

Carlyle Capital shares were down 34 percent at $0.25 at 1217 GMT (8:17 a.m. EDT). The initial public offer price 10 months ago was $19.

Carlyle Capital was hit severely by the impact of the credit crisis on leveraged investors. News of its default weighed on global markets last week.

The crisis was triggered last year when risky mortgages made to U.S. borrowers went sour putting pressure on lenders to tighten credit and making it difficult to value collateralized debt, mortgage portfolios and other fixed-income securities.

1
Mar 19, 2008 11:34AM

Mar 20, 2008 04:11AM

Mar 20, 2008 07:44PM

Mar 20, 2008 07:46PM
Share
New Message
Please login to post a reply