Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - (Page 12) Stuart Culverhouse, chief economist at Exotix, says Cuba may yet see a turnaround. based in Europe and the Middle East, which have no such restrictions, are placing bets on Cuban distressed debt, buying up loans made by foreign commercial banks to Havana in the 1980s on which the government of Fidel Castro declared a moratorium on interest payments in 1986. These defaulted loans — which total about $1 billion in principal (and are worth approximately $3 billion including the accrued interest) — trade today at 15 to 17 cents on the dollar. This debt could increase in value if U.S.-Cuban relations change. In February, Castro handed power to his brother Raul, who has promised to liberalize the economy. Some political pundits say that when the Bush administration leaves office eight months from now, rapprochement between Washington and Havana may at long last occur, bringing with it a restructuring of the debt — and big profits for the debt holders. “We’ve seen it happen in the case of other countries that have defaulted, such as the former Yugoslavia, where the breakup of the country led to a default in debt and then paper performed pretty quickly after the resolution of the conflict,” says Stuart Culverhouse, chief economist at Exotix, a London-based securities firm specializing in brokering the illiquid loans, equity and bonds of such esoteric markets as Bosnia, Cuba and North Korea. Exotix also plumbs emerging markets in Latin America, the Middle East and North Africa. By all accounts, Cuba has nowhere to go but up. The World Bank says the country’s population is approaching 11.5 million. It remains a developing country 49 years after Castro came to power. Only about half the country’s roads are paved, about one in ten people have a telephone, and less than 5 percent of the population has Internet access. The country’s economic struggles have been magnified since the former Soviet Union withdrew most of its subsidies in the late 1980s. Culverhouse cautions that Cuba could remain in default forever on its outstanding loans. But he says there’s hope: “What we’ve seen in the past few months — especially since Fidel announced that he was stepping down — is heightened interest from non-U.S. hedge funds. We’re seeing a lot of demand for the paper from people who are buying into the story [of change in Cuba].” One recent buyer is Morten Bugge, managing partner and CIO of Global Evolution, a Danish emerging-markets hedge fund with $400 million in assets under management. Though his fund holds Cuban debt, he is cautious. “The fact that Fidel Castro has stepped down is a small step in the right direction,” Bugge says, “but he remains in the background, pulling the strings.” Moreover, he adds, much of the defaulted debt is tightly held by investors who, having waited patiently for this long, are loath to sell until things change and the debt goes up in value. Bugge says he expects “real price movement on Cuban debt” when — and if — three things happen. First, the death of Fidel Castro, who is 81 and in ill health. Second, the lifting of the U.S. economic embargo against Cuba. (Bugge says he expects relations to be restored if Barack Obama, the apparent Democratic nominee, beats Republican John McCain in November.) Third, the start-up of “any talk about restructuring debt.” Of course, the conditions might never be met, and U.S.Cuba relations might not be restored for years to come, but then again it could all transpire within a year or two. Bugge, who will travel to Havana in June to meet with government officials, private companies and banks, says Cuba has an untapped economic potential that is compelling as a long-term investment. He is not alone in this assessment: Ceiba Investments, a closed-end fund based on the British island of Guernsey and aimed specifically at Cuba, announced in April that it would list on the London Stock Exchange in June. The fund focuses on tourism and real-estate development, both long-neglected sectors under Castro, though Ceiba’s managing director, Sebastiaan Berger, says its strategy is not just to turn a quick buck. “We are not an event-driven fund,” he explains. “We are investing in ventures that make sense today in Cuba, and our aim is long-term capital growth.” — Robert F. Rosenberg Photograph by Ian Phillips-Mc Laren for Alpha 12 • INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR’S ALPHA • MAY 2008
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 Contents Letter from the Editor Longs & Shorts Pension Corner: Send in the Clones The Good Guys: Outside the Box Cover Story: Welcome to Oz Interview: The Tipping Point Regulation: When Sentinels Go Astray Strategies: Taking Credit Research Center: The Hedge Fund 100 Book Excerpt: Shoot the Messenger Alpha Bytes: VaR Enough? Unhedged: Commentary: Not Your Father's Activist Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 (Page Cover1) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 (Page Cover2) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Contents (Page 1) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Contents (Page 2) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 3) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 4) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 5) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 6) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 7) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 8) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 9) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 10) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 11) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 12) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 13) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 14) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 15) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 16) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Longs & Shorts (Page 17) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Pension Corner: Send in the Clones (Page 18) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Pension Corner: Send in the Clones (Page 19) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Pension Corner: Send in the Clones (Page 20) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Pension Corner: Send in the Clones (Page 21) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - The Good Guys: Outside the Box (Page 22) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - The Good Guys: Outside the Box (Page 23) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Cover Story: Welcome to Oz (Page 24) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Cover Story: Welcome to Oz (Page 25) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Cover Story: Welcome to Oz (Page 26) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Cover Story: Welcome to Oz (Page 27) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Cover Story: Welcome to Oz (Page 28) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Cover Story: Welcome to Oz (Page 29) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Cover Story: Welcome to Oz (Page 30) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Cover Story: Welcome to Oz (Page 31) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Cover Story: Welcome to Oz (Page 32) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Cover Story: Welcome to Oz (Page 33) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Interview: The Tipping Point (Page 34) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Interview: The Tipping Point (Page 35) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Interview: The Tipping Point (Page 36) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Interview: The Tipping Point (Page 37) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Regulation: When Sentinels Go Astray (Page 38) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Regulation: When Sentinels Go Astray (Page 39) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Regulation: When Sentinels Go Astray (Page 40) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Regulation: When Sentinels Go Astray (Page 41) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Strategies: Taking Credit (Page 42) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Strategies: Taking Credit (Page 43) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Strategies: Taking Credit (Page 44) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Strategies: Taking Credit (Page 45) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Strategies: Taking Credit (Page 46) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Strategies: Taking Credit (Page 47) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Strategies: Taking Credit (Page 48) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Research Center: The Hedge Fund 100 (Page 49) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Research Center: The Hedge Fund 100 (Page 50) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Research Center: The Hedge Fund 100 (Page 51) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Research Center: The Hedge Fund 100 (Page 52) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Research Center: The Hedge Fund 100 (Page 53) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Research Center: The Hedge Fund 100 (Page 54) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Research Center: The Hedge Fund 100 (Page 55) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Book Excerpt: Shoot the Messenger (Page 56) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Book Excerpt: Shoot the Messenger (Page 57) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Book Excerpt: Shoot the Messenger (Page 58) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Book Excerpt: Shoot the Messenger (Page 59) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Book Excerpt: Shoot the Messenger (Page 60) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Alpha Bytes: VaR Enough? (Page 61) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Alpha Bytes: VaR Enough? (Page 62) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Alpha Bytes: VaR Enough? (Page 63) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Unhedged: Commentary: Not Your Father's Activist (Page 64) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Unhedged: Commentary: Not Your Father's Activist (Page Cover3) Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine - May 2008 - Unhedged: Commentary: Not Your Father's Activist (Page Cover4)
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