The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Former US$2 billion private equity fund now nearly worthless

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NEW YORK: Wells Fargo and a number of other lenders are negotiatin­g to take control of a hedge fund previously valued at more than US$2 billion that is now worth close to nothing, according to a report from the Wall Street Journal.

EnerVest Ltd, a Houston private equity firm that focuses on energy investment­s, manages the private equity fund that focused on oil investment­s.

The fund will leave clients, including major pensions, endowments and charitable foundation­s, with at most pennies on the dollar, WSJ reported.

The firm raised and started investing money beginning in 2013 when oil was trading at around US$90 a barrel and added US$1.3 billion of borrowed money to boost its buying power.

West Texas Intermedia­te crude prices closed at US$46.54 a barrel on Friday.

“We are not proud of the result,” John Walker, EnerVest’s co-founder and chief executive, wrote in an email to the Journal.

Only seven privateequ­ity funds worth more than US$1 billion have ever lost money for investors, according to data from investment firm Cambridge Associates LLC cited in the report.

Among those of any size to end in the red, losses greater than around 25 per cent are extremely rare, though there are several energy-focused funds in danger of doing so, according to public pension records.

Clients included the J. Paul Getty Trust, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur and Fletcher Jones foundation­s, which each invested millions in the fund, according to their tax filings, the Journal reported.

Michigan State University and a foundation that supports Arizona State University also disclosed investment­s in the fund.

The Orange County Employees Retirement System was also an investors and has reportedly marked the value of its investment down to zero.

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