• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Duration Capital hedge fund cuts ties with JPMorgan

Thu Mar 13, 2008 5:38pm EDT

Stocks

   

NEW YORK, March 13 (Reuters) - Duration Capital, one of several hedge funds forced to sell hundreds of millions of dollars of municipal bonds when their bets went awry, is severing its links with its main prime broker, JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N), a source familiar with the situation said on Thursday.

Stocks  |  Bonds  |  Funds News  |  ETFs News

Duration will continue to do business with other prime brokers, including Merrill Lynch MER.N, said the source, who requested anonymity.

JPMorgan has not "threatened" Duration or given it "any termination" event, said the source, saying only that the relationship had deteriorated. Duration is raising additional funds from existing investors, he added.

Duration has whittled its portfolio at the bank down to about $50 million since August, when the global credit crunch first hit the $2.6 trillion municipal bond market, forcing players to hurriedly cut their losses by selling debt.

"We are still in business, we're open, we're operating and transacting," a Duration spokesman said. He declined to comment further.

Spokesmen for the two banks were not immediately available.

The municipal bond market was slammed in February and early March by billions of dollars of sales from hedge funds, arbitragers and other players that use leverage to boost their profits.

Many of these sellers were forced to liquidate their holdings to meet margin calls because their financing costs had spiraled at the same time the value of their long-term holdings plunged.

This downward spiral most recently claimed Blue River Asset Management's main muni bond fund. The fund, which market sources said previously had more than $1 billion in assets, is liquidating after a harsh sell-off in the bond market, sources familiar with the situation said on Tuesday. (Reporting by Joan Gralla; Editing by Dan Grebler)



More from Reuters

Photo

Honda expands airbag recall as more Toyotas probed

TOKYO/DETROIT (Reuters) - Honda Motor Co said it would recall another 440,000 cars around the world for faulty airbags as rival Toyota Motor Corp faced further probes over its largest-ever safety crisis. | Video

A worker walks on steel frames at a construction site in central Beijing January 27, 2010. REUTERS/Loic Hofstedt
Analysis:

China's boom may lead to bust

The housing market is becoming the investment of choice for the Chinese, which is making policymakers very nervous.  Full Article