The situation with Blue Owl seems to be getting worse at an accelerating rate. We mentioned it quickly last week when they halted redemptions with a "retail based private credit fund" but the stock continues to go down. Here's more from Yahoo and Bloomberg.
Private credit and equity have been showing signs of excess for a while. It's not clear to me how serious the excesses are but there has obviously been a big push to make private assets available in more retail accessible funds and retirement plans. I've been consistent for years in being skeptical of these type of investments, I don't believe they will give the great deals to people's 401k plans. If you want to benefit from private assets, I've argued for buying the companies selling the picks and shovels, the fund providers, the ones making the fees on the funds not the funds themselves which are paying the fees.
The history of this group is that when times are good, they are great and when things take a bad turn, like now, the stocks get pounded but they do capture what is going on in the world of private assets. They are now on a run of getting pounded. In the last month Blackstone (BX) is down 24%, Apollo (APO) is down 16% and Ares (ARES) is down 26%. I've never owned one of these. I've never thought about buying one, just making the point for blogging purposes that I believe the management companies make more sense for anyone wanting to access the space.
The reason I don't want the exposure is the complexity of these companies and the leverage. Many of the large banks are similarly complex, maybe more so, and also heavily leveraged. This is subjective but financials (meaning the banks) is probably the most complex of the sectors. It might be difficult to understand the manufacturing process and equipment in the tech sector but I believe the businesses are less complex.
Given how complex many financials are, it should not be a black swan if this event starting with Blue Owl evolves into something very serious. To be clear, I have no idea but this is space that is prone to blow ups. There's no reason to own something with such a clear path to blowing up or at least no reason to have a meaningful position. I don't think there is asymmetric potential with private credit like there is with Bitcoin.
Mark Baker, aka Guru Anaerobic on Twitter talks about figuring out what to avoid, via negativa, and this is very important concept in portfolio construction. Avoid can sometimes be too much as opposed to underweight. There are excesses in the AI space too of course but there I'm just underweight. This isn't a riskless endeavor, the conversation is managing risk not completely avoiding it.
In a similar vein, we're probably all watching the news from Mexico and the apparent impact on Puerto Vallarta which as many have reported is where a lot of American, expat retirees live. Moving to another country for retirement (just a few years or permanently) is something we've been looking at for a while in various places. It is a fun exercise to think about living in another country even if you're not serious about ever doing it (that describes me).
Quite a while ago I wrote a few posts about Ecuador in this context. I made contact through Linkedin with someone (Edd Slaton might have been his name) who had moved to Cuenca, Ecuador with his wife and had some sort business helping people relocate to Ecuador. Then there started to be political unrest pretty close to the covid outbreak but I think the unrest was more political and focused more in Quito than anywhere else. I reached out to Edd back then to see if Cuenca was impacted but and his wife were vacationing in France and he wasn't sure.
In the last few months I saw something that gave me the impression he and his wife left Ecuador and were somewhere in Europe. My suggestion has been to not sell your house in the US. Rent it out, have the income stream and a way to come back if you want to or think you need to. I have no idea what the real story is in Mexico but it would not be unreasonable for an expat in Puerta Vallarta to think they need to get out of there when the dust settles. The nature of housing in a lot of places is that if you sell and don't rebuy, you'll get priced out.
You can always sell later but you might not be able to buy back in later.
Going heavy into private assets one way or another and moving to another country with no fallback are both examples of things that are easy to recognize as risks that don't need to be taken.
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