Philly EnterpriseTech Roundup 12/29 to 12/31: FS Investment's troubles; A look at some of the individual investors in Uber
Soon after Philly-based FS Investments (formerly Franklin Square Investments) completed the merger of its largest fund, FS Investment Corp., with Corporate Capital Trust, the Financial Times reported new fund co-manager KKR had written down the fund's book value by more than 25% since taking over.
The $2 billion debt fund, formerly co-managed by Blackstone, was turned over to KKR in April.
The fund, renamed FS-KKR Capital Corp when the management contract was moved from Blackstone to KKR, wrote down five of its major investments. Thermasys, a Buffalo-based manufacturer of industrial heat exchangers that missed an interest payment in the autumn and has been unable to refinance debts having payments due next year, was one of the largest. KKR now values the company’s subordinated debt at $72.4 million, down from $112 million.
The FT reports that the problems were more than anticipated by KKR. It suggests that KKR is not as much of a workout-oriented firm as Blackstone, and because of risk uncertainty its valuations tend to be more conservative.
While the write down is not good news for the FSI or shareholders, by itself it doesn't seem to be an event of enough magnitude to flame existing fears of broader problems in the corporate debt market.
FS Investments now has about $24 billion in assets under management.
The FT article was not a complete surprise. In late November, FSI had acknowledged some of its problems to its investors and independent sales people .
Most of of us know the story of how First Round Capital led Uber's small seed round and probably (at least partially) exited last year with a multi-billion dollar payoff. But besides other venture capital firms, there was also a small army of individual investors who joined in that round. One was Jeff Bezos, like he really needs it.
But another is West Philly-born talent manager and producer Troy Carter, who managed musicians like John Legend and Lady Gaga. He went on to be an executive at Spotify, and is now managing his own incubator, the Atom Factory, in LA.
Sears wanted to be an online giant https://t.co/jQmmZeD0Pf pic.twitter.com/pi1Y6WFDGo
— Tom Paine (@phillytechnews) December 31, 2018
Comcast to Drop Jennifer Lopez-Owned Fuse Music Channel https://t.co/7To7IZNJax via @variety
— Tom Paine (@phillytechnews) December 31, 2018
It will take me awhile to figure out what happened here
— Tom Paine (@phillytechnews) December 30, 2018
Franklin Square loan fund plunges after switch to KKR https://t.co/0gXdPyLxlS via @financialtimes
Report: Huge CenturyLink outage caused by bad networking card in Colorado https://t.co/4bL02snjZc via @GeekWire
— Tom Paine (@phillytechnews) December 30, 2018
7 people you never realized were early investors in Uber https://t.co/yMiF1iGBcB via @businessinsider
— Tom Paine (@phillytechnews) December 30, 2018
How Comcast Plans to Leverage Its $39 Billion Sky Acquisition in 2019 https://t.co/6fHXYRl5Rj via @thr
— Tom Paine (@phillytechnews) December 30, 2018
How Comcast Plans to Leverage Its $39 Billion Sky Acquisition in 2019 https://t.co/6fHXYRl5Rj via @thr
— Tom Paine (@phillytechnews) December 30, 2018
Remembering people we lost in 2018: Rothman, Lenfest, Goodman and Beste https://t.co/kghQI2buHc #philly #feedly
— Tom Paine (@phillytechnews) December 30, 2018
Blue Apron Surges 22%, Back Above $1 a Share, After Partnering With Weight Watchers https://t.co/tcRQG20ZeP #mustreadblogs #feedly
— Tom Paine (@phillytechnews) December 29, 2018
No comments:
Post a Comment