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Klarman in CIT Rescue Group

The details of this are great…..for Baupost and Klarman..

HedgeFund.net reports:

A Boston hedge fund is taking part in the multibillion-dollar bailout of CIT Group.

The hedge fund, Baupost Group, has agreed to pitch in for the $2 billion bridge loan Barclays Capital put together for the commercial finance company. Century-old CIT Group is facing bankruptcy after the government rejected its request for a second bailout.

Baupost Group is a bondholder in CIT Group. In addition to the hedge fund, the $2 billion loan is comprised of private equity capital. Centerbridge, Oaktree Capital Management and Silver Point Capital Management are contributing a chunk of the financing.

Pacific Investment Management Co., headed by bond king Bill Gross, is the largest bondholder in CIT Group, followed by mutual fund company Capital Research & Management.

CIT Group is expecting to raise an additional billion. The New York company has lost $3 billion since 2008, and was granted a $2.4 billion rescue in December. CIT Group has a $75 billion asset base.

Baupost Group is run by value investor Seth Klarman, who joined the company at 25 after graduating from Harvard Business School. He has published a book on investing, and in May bought a piece of professional baseball franchise the Boston Red Sox.

Baupost Group has $16 billion in capital.

The terms are for a $3B cash injection secured by $30B in assets. The loans pay a 13% initial interest rate (10% above LIBOR with a 3% floor).

Not a bad deal at all…..


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2008 Seth Klarman Interview

Great line:

Warren Buffett once wrote that the concept of value investing is like an inoculation- — it either takes or it doesn’t — and when you explain to somebody what it is and how it works and why it works and show them the returns, either they get it or they don’t. Ultimately, it needs to fit your character. If you have a need for action, if you want to be involved in the new and exciting technological breakthroughs of our time, that’s great, but you’re not a value investor and you shouldn’t be one. If you are predisposed to be patient and disciplined, and you psychologically like the idea of buying bargains, then you’re likely to be good at it.

Seth Klarman – IIMagazine -2008


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Seth Klarman to Take Stake in Red Sox?

As if we did not have enough reasons to like Baupost Group’s Seth Klarman

From the Boston Globe:

Advertising mogul Ed Eskandarian is selling his minority stake in the Boston Red Sox to Seth Klarman, a well known Boston hedge fund manager, according to two people briefed on the transaction.

Eskandarian is one of a group of three Boston businessmen who together invested $25 million in the 2002 purchase of the Red Sox, led by John Henry and Tom Werner. Their stake at the time represented about 3.6 percent of the $700 million deal. Eskandarian, chairman of Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency, invested about $6 million.

Klarman and Eskandarian both declined to comment. The Red Sox also declined to comment.

However, by yesterday Eskandarian’s name had been removed from the list of owners posted on the team website. Klarman, who runs Baupost Group in Boston, is not listed as an owner. Major League Baseball must approve any change in team ownership.

The New York Times Co., which owns The Boston Globe, is trying to sell its 17.5 percent stake in the Red Sox. According to published reports, the Times Co. believes its stake is worth $200 million, which would value the team at $1.1 billion.

One of Eskandarian’s co-investors, TJX Cos. chairman Ben Cammarata, sold his stake in the team in 2007. The third investor, former textile executive Martin Trust, remains an owner.

It could not be learned yesterday what price Eskandarian is getting for his share. Cammarata, reached by telephone yesterday, said he did not know what a Red Sox stake would fetch today. He would not say how much he sold his $12.5 million stake for: “It was a wonderful time and a very good investment.”

The Red Sox franchise has risen in value, to $833 million, according to rankings created by Forbes magazine each year. The Red Sox are the third most valuable team in baseball, behind the New York Yankees and the New York Mets.

When David D’Alessandro, the former chief executive of John Hancock Financial Services Inc., sold his $5 million stake in the team in 2007, he reaped just over double his original investment, $10.3 million, the Globe reported.


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Seth Klarman Interview…

2009 Klarman Interview 2009 Klarman Interview todd sullivan

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Seth Klarman Files 13-HR

Klarman’s Baupost Group made some interesting additions since the February filing

News Corp “A” (NWSA) shares up from 16 million to 27 million shares
RHI Entertainment (RHIE) from 3.6 to 4.9 million shares
Domtar (UFS) from 33 million to 40 million shares
Linn Energy (LINE) from 7.9 million to 4 million shares

Baupost Q1 2009 13-HR

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Baupost Group Letters 1995-2001

Hat Tip: Noise Free Investing (please visit link)

Baupost Fund Letters

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Time to Look at a Natural Gas Play

With natural gas at insanely low levels, there is value in the sector. I have a potential play on it.

Here is a fantastic post on the inevitable natural gas price spike courtesy of Chris Nedler at getREALlist

Here is the basics on supply/demand/pricing from the post:

Now I am seeing the same pattern in natural gas (or as traders sometimes call it, “natty”), only the danger of constrained supply is possibly even greater, since about 84% of US natural gas consumed is produced domestically and there is very little storage throughout the system.

Gas prices have plunged 72% from their record of over $13 per Mcf1 to $3.75 on Monday, taking it all the way back to 2002 pricing. (The spot price for natural gas has only fallen below $4 once since 2002, in September 2006.)

All that got me to thinking. How to play gas? I could go with the producers of it but since most of them can’t make money with gas under $6, an 80% rally in natural gas prices would do little for their fortunes (except keep them from Chapter 11).

I could play natural gas itself but it can rally to a level and just sit there while affiliated stock keep making money for shareholders.

We can substitute oil for natural gas and all of the above would be true also.

What then? Oil Well Services and Equipment. All producers need serviced on existing wells and close wells. When prices rebound, the corresponding increase in well activity will be a boon for these companies.

Enter Exterran Holdings, Inc. (Public, NYSE:EXH).

From the 10K:

We are a global market leader in the full service natural gas compression business and a premier provider of operations, maintenance, service and equipment for oil and natural gas production, processing and transportation applications. Our global customer base consists of companies engaged in all aspects of the oil and natural gas industry, including large integrated oil and natural gas companies, national oil and natural gas companies, independent producers and natural gas processors, gatherers and pipelines.

We operate in three primary business lines: contract operations, fabrication and aftermarket services. In our contract operations business line, we own a fleet of natural gas compression equipment and crude oil and natural gas production and processing equipment that we utilize to provide operations services to our customers. In our fabrication business line, we fabricate and sell equipment that is similar to the equipment that we own and utilize to provide contract operations to our customers.

We also utilize our expertise and fabrication facilities to build equipment utilized in our contract operations services. Our fabrication business line also provides engineering, procurement and construction services primarily related to the manufacturing of critical process equipment for refinery and petrochemical facilities, the construction of tank farms and the construction of evaporators and brine heaters for desalination plants.

In what we refer to as “Total Solutions” projects, we can provide the engineering design, project management, procurement and construction services necessary to incorporate our products into complete production, processing and compression facilities. Total Solutions products are offered to our customers on a contract operations or on a turn-key sale basis. In our aftermarket services business line, we sell parts and components and provide operations, maintenance, overhaul and reconfiguration services to customers who own compression, production, gas treating and oilfield power generation equipment.

Why Exteran?

Valuation:
Even after writing off $1.1 billion in Gooodwill due to market conditions in Q4, Exterran still sports a book value of $32 a share. At the current $17 share price it trades at 53% of book. Cash flow and cash on hand are steady.

Stock Repurchase Program.

On August 20, 2007, our board of directors authorized the repurchase of up to $200 million of our common stock through August 19, 2009. In December 2008, our board of directors increased the share repurchase program, from $200 million to $300 million, and extended the expiration date of the authorization, from August 19, 2009 to December 15, 2010. See further discussion of the stock repurchase program in Note 15 to the Financial Statements. Since the program was initiated, we have repurchased 5,416,221 shares of our common stock at an aggregate cost of approximately $199.9 million. See Part II, Item 5 (“Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities”) of this report for information regarding our fourth quarter 2008 repurchases.

Ownership:
Nearly 45% of the stock is owned by 5 groups including 8% by ValuePlays favorite Seth Klarman’s Baupost Group.

Now, is this a “run out and buy some”? I don’t think so but I am keeping it high on the radar list. While both oil and natural gas are at unsustainably low levels. History tells us they can remain there for some time. It also tells us that the recovery to appropriate levels can be swift and violent.

As Nedler says:

The time it takes to raise capital for new drilling, deploy rigs, and start producing again after gas prices rise is a golden window of opportunity for investors. As long as marginal capacity remains in a razor-thin range, prices will stay high and low-cost producers will be rolling in profits again.

While it’s impossible to say when the US economy will recover and bring natural gas prices back into sustainable territory, I am confident that for those with at least a one-year investing horizon, there is no better time than now to begin accumulating those positions.

One has to watch economic activity for sign. Q1 will be reported in May and by then more data will be available as to global conditions. It is important to note this is not a pure US play but a global one. As global conditions improve, so ought Exterran’s.

Q4 Earnings release

Full 10K


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The Case For RHI Entertainment

A follow up to yesterday’s post….

First, let’s get into more detail on what they really do and to find it we’ll comb the 10-K filing with the sec.

Overview

We develop, produce and distribute new made-for-television movies, mini-series and other television programming worldwide. We are the leading provider of new long-form television content, including domestic made-for-television, or MFT, movies and mini-series. We also selectively produce new episodic series programming for television. In addition to our development, production and distribution of new content, we own an extensive library of existing long-form television content, which we license primarily to broadcast and cable networks worldwide.

Our business is comprised of the licensing of new film production and the licensing of existing content from our film library in territories around the world. Licensing rights in our film library generate contractual accounts receivable. The contractual accounts receivable reflect license agreements we have entered into with third parties for rights to our film content in future periods. The ability to license our library content in this manner provides us with visibility into long-term library cash flow

Made-for-television movies

Our MFT movie franchise focuses on the production of films with dramatic, suspenseful, or more recently, action/thriller storylines which are generally two broadcast hours in length. With production costs of $1.0 to $2.0 million per broadcast hour, our MFT movies limit our financial risk with their short production cycles and pre-sales which typically recoup the majority of our cost of production. In 2007 and 2008 our pre-sales equaled 84% and 70% of our MFT movie production costs, respectively. The decline in pre-sales as a percentage of production costs reflects lower sales activity resulting from the general economic slow down in the second half of the year and our operating decision to provide exploitation windows for programming on ION Media Networks (ION) and/or pay-per-view (PPV), prior to exploitation windows on broadcast or cable networks.

MFT movies are ordered by broadcast and cable networks and have become an integral part of the broadcast strategies of these programmers. Networks license the rights to air films that meet the characteristics of the network’s genre and therefore will appeal to their viewers. In 2008, we delivered multiple MFT movies to the Hallmark Channel, Lifetime, the Sci-Fi Channel and Spike TV. In 2009, we have completed development and have begun production for several MFT movies, which have already been licensed to broadcast and cable networks.

Mini-series

Over the past 20 years, we have shaped the mini-series industry with award winning and highly-rated releases like Lonesome Dove, Gulliver’s Travels, Human Trafficking, Tin Man and Mitch Albom’s The Five People You Meet in Heaven. A mini-series is typically four broadcast hours in length and production costs are approximately $2 to $5 million per broadcast hour of content. Typically, mini-series are ordered by broadcast and cable networks on a picture-by-picture basis. In 2007, we pre-sold more than 100% of our production costs for mini-series. In 2008, the pre-sales were 80% of our production costs for mini-series, reflecting the lower sales activity resulting from the general economic slowdown in the second half of the year and our operating decision to provide exploitation windows for programming on ION as noted above.

Long-form television library

With more than 1,000 titles, comprising over 3,500 broadcast hours of long-form television programming, our library is an important source of contractual cash flow, revenue and growth for our business. Our film library is enhanced each year with the addition of new MFT movies, mini-series and other television programming as their initial licenses expire. These new productions add value to the film library and ensure that it remains current. We believe that the talent and recognizability of the actors and actresses starring in our productions, along with the subject matter, result in our library having a long shelf life. Classic MFT movies and mini-series such as Cleopatra, Alice In Wonderland, Call of the Wild, Dinotopia, Arabian Nights, Merlin, The Odyssey and The Lion in Winter are examples of our library content which have been repeatedly licensed to our customers over the last several years.

Our productions have won 105 Emmy® Awards, 15 Golden Globes Awards and eight Peabody Awards.

Now, put you thinking cap on here. The company’s top customers are the Hallmark channel and Lifetime. What risk is there that they could lose, say the Hallmark account? This why you read the 10-k notes:

On January 12, 2006, HEI Acquisition, LLC acquired all of the membership interests in Hallmark Entertainment from HEH, subject to a Purchase and Sale Agreement (PSA) dated November 29, 2005 (the Acquisition). HEI Acquisition, LLC was immediately merged with and into Hallmark Entertainment and its name was concurrently changed to RHI LLC. RHI LLC’s sole member is Holdings, a limited liability company controlled by affiliates of Kelso. (RHI owns 46% of Kelso…note mine)

The Company acquired Hallmark Entertainment in order for it to execute its business strategy. The purchase price reflects the Company’s assessment that Hallmark Entertainment could be managed more efficiently and profitably when operated independently allowing the Company to refine its business model and production strategy by focusing on the most profitable content rather than volume, broadening and diversifying the type of content that it develops, produces and distributes and exploiting new distribution opportunities.

You know the “Hallmark Original” movies you see on the channel? Yup, they make em’

A 2008 10-Q says it more clearly:

On January 12, 2006, Hallmark Entertainment Holdings, LLC (Hallmark) sold its 100% interest in Hallmark Entertainment, LLC (Hallmark Entertainment) to HEI Acquisition, LLC. HEI Acquisition, LLC was immediately merged with and into Hallmark Entertainment and its name was changed to RHI Entertainment, LLC (RHI LLC or the Predecessor Company). Subsequent to the transaction, RHI LLC’s sole member was RHI Entertainment Holdings, LLC (Holdings), a limited liability company controlled by affiliates of Kelso & Company L.P. (Kelso). RHI LLC is engaged in the development, production and distribution of made-for-television movies, mini-series and other television programming (collectively, Films).

On June 23, 2008, RHI Entertainment, Inc. (RHI Inc. or the Successor Company) completed its initial public offering (the IPO).

But in the words of Apple’s Steve Jobs “wait, there’s more”

The Hallmark Channel is owned by Crown Media Holdings (CRWN). Back to the 10-k:

On October 5, 2006, the Company entered into a definitive agreement with Crown Media to purchase Crown Media Distribution, LLC for $160.0 million (subject to certain accounts receivable adjustments). The assets of Crown Media Distribution, LLC are comprised of a completed film library consisting of approximately 550 titles and approximately 2,400 hours of programming (Crown Film Library) and trade accounts receivable.

So, you know the “Hallmark Hall of Fame” movies? Yup, they own them.From Crown’s recent 10-k

Until we sold our domestic library to RHI Entertainment LLC on December 15, 2006, we licensed our film assets to broadcasters and video distributors (pay television channel providers) who paid a license fee for the right to exhibit or distribute the programming over a certain period of time.

In short, they essentially own the content Hallmark runs on its network. Nice.

But you’ll say, “Todd, they reported a loss last year!!” Back to 10-K

We have incurred net losses in the past largely due to amortization of film production costs, inclusive of impairment charges, and interest expense on our outstanding indebtedness. During the year ended December 31, 2008, a non-cash impairment charge of $59.8 million with respect to goodwill was recorded as the result of our stock price declining significantly to a level implying a market capitalization below our book value.

Without the goodwill charge the company earned NI of $16 million or $1.23 a share.

What about that book value? As of 12/31 it stood at $7.85 a share vs a $1.89 a share stock price today or you could say the company sells at 24% of its book value.

FULL 10-K


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Will be going long RHI, none

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Seth Klarman Ups RHI Stake to Over 36%

Earlier this week Klarman’s Baupost Group purchased an additional 437,000 share of RHI at $1.19 a share.

Klarman now has 36.9% of the outstanding shares.

Here is the trading data for this year.

Klarman has been in touch with management as the 13D/A stated:

“The shares were acquired for investment in the ordinary course of business. Although the Reporting Persons intend from time to time to discuss with management issues about the Issuer and its strategic direction…”

So, what is RHI Entertainment (RHIE) and what the hell do they do?

RHI Entertainment, Inc. develops, produces and distributes new made-for-television movies, mini-series and other television programming worldwide. The Company provides long-form television content, including domestic made-for-television (MFT), movies and mini-series. It also selectively produces new episodic series programming for television. In addition to its development, production and distribution of new content, it owns an library of existing long-form television content, which the Company licenses primarily to broadcast and cable networks worldwide. RHI Entertainment, Inc’s business is comprised of the licensing of new film production and the licensing of existing content from its film library in territories worldwide. Licensing rights in its film library generate contractual accounts receivable. The contractual accounts receivable reflects license agreements it has entered into with third parties for rights to its film content in future periods.

Now, this is an interesting one because a quick glance at the financials reveals nothing that would make someone jump up and say “I’ve been buying at almost 5 and now it is under two, let’s pick up a whole lot more shares”. This is, however just what Klarman did. Klarman is also one of the best investors out there now so paying attention to him makes sense.

It also makes finding out what there is about this he likes worth the time. If you know, please leave it in the comments.


Disclosure (“none” means no position):None

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Seth Klarman’s Baupost Group Leads in Inflows

Having a stunning track record is a very good thing in bad times…

Wall St. Newsletters

Bloomberg Reports:

Baupost Group LLC, a Boston-based hedge fund run by Seth Klarman, gained the most assets in 2008, with money under management rising 49 percent to $16.8 billion, according to the magazine.

Disclosure (“none” means no position):None

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Baupost Group Files Quarterly Report

Seth Klarman’s Baupost Group has filed it latest quarterly report.

Wall St. Newsletters

Here are the holdings:

Full Filing


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Security Analysis, 6th Edition

This is the latest 6th edition of the book with a forward from Seth Klarman & James Grant

Wall St. Newsletters

Security Analysis , Sixth Edition

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Seth Klarman Interviewed by Harvard Business School

Wall St. Newsletters

This is a god one:

While other money managers scrambled to survive the financial market meltdown, value investor extraordinaire Seth Klarman (MBA ’82), president of The Baupost Group in Boston, cautiously pursued buying opportunities. After sitting patiently on the sidelines with a mountain of cash — 40 to 50 percent of Baupost’s $14 billion–plus in assets — for several years, the firm’s recent investments have cut its cash stash in half. Distress selling, it seems, breeds the kind of bargains Klarman lives for.

Fresh out of HBS, Klarman didn’t hesitate when Adjunct Professor Bill Poorvu recruited him to help manage a $27 million pool of capital in the newly formed Baupost. While the starting salary was an underwhelming $35K, it turned out to be the opportunity of a lifetime. In 26 years, Baupost has racked up an enviable 20 percent annual compound rate of return, earning Klarman entry into the Alpha magazine Hedge Fund Hall of Fame. The firm has grown from 3 to 100 employees.

A consummate team player, Klarman rarely uses his private office, choosing instead to sit at the trading desk where he works closely with analysts on investment decisions. But work isn’t all-consuming. He makes time for family and outside pursuits. As his three children grew, he coached his daughters’ soccer teams and attended his son’s recitals. And he is deeply committed to a number of philanthropic causes. Klarman recently took time to discuss investing, the credit crisis, and his approach to philanthropy.

When you started with Baupost at age 25, did you already consider yourself a value investor?
Yes. After my junior year in college and right after graduating, I worked for Mutual Shares Corporation, which was run by a wonderful gentleman named Max Heine. I learned a huge amount about value investing. It turns out that value investing is something that is in your blood. There are people who just don’t have the patience and discipline to do it, and there are people who do. So it leads me to think it’s genetic.

Did you ever waver in your investment style?
Never once.

What gave you the resolve to say no to all the other investment approaches?
There are several answers. First, value investing is intellectually elegant. You’re basically buying bargains. It also appeals because all the studies demonstrate that it works. People who chase growth, who chase highfliers, inevitably lose because they paid a premium price. They lose to the people who have more patience and more discipline. Third, it’s easy to talk in the abstract, but in real life you see situations that are just plain mispriced, where an ignored, neglected, or abhorred company may be just as attractive as others in the same industry. In time, the discount will be corrected, and you will have the wind at your back as a holder of the stock.

Do you set an annual return target?
We think it’s madness to target a return. Return lies in some relationship to risk, albeit there are moments when it’s out of whack, when you can make a high return with very limited risk. My view is that you can target risk versus return. So you can say, I’ll take the very safe 6 percent, I’ll take the somewhat risky 12, or I’ll take the enormously risky 20, knowing that 20 might actually be minus 20 by the time the actual results are known. We just don’t think targeting a return is smart.

You are lead editor of the new edition of Security Analysis, the bible of value investing by Benjamin Graham and David Dodd, first published in 1934. Is their advice still relevant 75 years later?
At no time since 1934 has it been so relevant given the financial turmoil and distress in the world and the possibility that we could be reliving some sort of serious economic downturn. What’s wonderful about Graham and Dodd is that their advice is timeless. And it is not just about investing; it’s also about thinking about investing. It basically teaches you the questions that you should ask, and it makes endless references to the foibles of human nature in the markets.

Given the recent credit market meltdown, have we made much progress in figuring out how to avoid the pitfalls pointed out by Graham and Dodd?
No. What happens is that people always want to believe that this time is different, that there’s something new under the sun, and that through their own ingenuity they can wish away risk. The idea that risk premiums would go to zero, that we’re somehow overcoming human nature, is absurd. The whole reason that our capitalist system works the way it does is because there are cycles, and the cycles self-correct. With too much excess, eventually you get a downturn.

So the explosion in securitized assets was a ticking time bomb?
It’s not amazing that securitized products were created. There are huge financial incentives for the people involved. What’s amazing is that anybody actually bought them. That’s because they’re created with a one-dimensional idea of what the economy and the world are going to do. If you have nothing but good times, then securitization makes tremendous sense. But securitization, for all of the commingling and diversification it gives you, also gives you a lack of transparency. So if you have an environment like the one we have now, the assets that have been securitized actually make you worse off than if they were just held as whole loans.

The unanswered question is how did the smartest people in the world who run the major Wall Street firms not understand that these products were toxic and end up getting caught with them on their books?

As Fed chairman, did Alan Greenspan have a hand in creating the current credit market crisis?
Until recently, Greenspan seemed unaware of his role in influencing markets. As Fed chairman, when he advised people not very many years ago to take out variable rate mortgages, he aided and abetted the housing market excesses. When he said there was irrational exuberance in the market [in 1996], he was basically right. But then he didn’t act even though he had plenty of levers he could have pulled that didn’t have to do with changing interest rates. He could have raised margin requirements, for example. But instead, he came up with the ridiculously lame idea that bubbles need to be allowed to run and that the Fed can clean up the mess afterward, which only had the effect of inflating subsequent bubbles, most notably the housing bubble that came as a result of the easy money. So he’s just been unaware of the impact of his encouragement, and his inaction got us into the terrible mess we’re in today. It’s not all his fault, but I hold him largely responsible for it.

How have Ben Bernanke and Henry Paulson (MBA ’70) done in managing the financial crisis?
They have been dealt an unimaginably bad hand. If any of us were in their shoes, we would be doing similar things, although it is reasonable to assume that part of the problem we are facing today is a result of previous government actions, and today’s government actions will give rise to future problems as well.

The lesson should be that we need to get to a point where we don’t need to intervene in the future, because we realize that intervention also delivers incredibly dangerous messages and creates a giant moral hazard. Bernanke and Paulson have to realize that if we’re going to intervene when things are bad, we’re also going to intervene when things are good and take away the punch bowl before the party gets too far along. One-sided intervention is even more dangerous. It will create an ever bigger bunch of excesses that will require an even bigger bailout next time.

Was the $700 billion federal rescue package, sold as a plan to buy toxic mortgage-backed securities from banks, the right way to go?
Defining the problem you are trying to solve is critical in knowing whether this plan will solve it. The bailout does almost nothing to solve the specific problem of declining housing prices. If the government really wants to tackle that problem, making capital available so that banks can make safe loans is crucial. Injecting $250 billion into the nation’s banks is a big step in that direction.

How do you approach philanthropy?
I’m a big believer in giving back. We all have an obligation to leave things better than where we found them.

I have more than I’ll ever need, and more than my family will ever need. I’m only working now for philanthropy. So everything I do is about giving back. In fact, one of the things we did at Baupost when we recently took on some additional clients was to accept only educational endowments and foundations. We figured we would further benefit the world by helping these organizations rather than individuals. That decision was very important for me and for all the firm’s partners.

Also, given the extremely difficult financial environment we are in, I expect charities will be greatly affected. That’s why it’s incumbent on those who can to step up and help fill the void.

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Baupost Group Holdings Drop $300 Million

Just files 13HR..

Wall St. Newsletters

From the quarter ending June to the quarter ending Sept, Seth Klarman’s Baupost Group stock holdings drop from $1.9 billion to $1.6 billion.

The number of issues held fell from 69 in June to 52 in September.

Of course there is no word whether or not this was redemption based or valuation based selling.

He did add to his position in News Corp. (NWS) buy 30%. He also did large scale selling in both Wellpoint (WLP) and United Health (UNH).

In this market it is hard to tell why anyone is doing anything. Note…there is no notice as to the level of cash holdings, this is not indicative of performance, just the value of stock holdings.

Disclosure (“none” means no position):none
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