Hedge funds 'could drive firms under' |
Date: Thursday, May 7, 2009
Author: GAAPweb.com
Hedge funds could lead to an increase in the number of businesses
becoming insolvent as they look to extract profits from struggling
firms, it has been claimed.
Speaking to the Guardian, Philip
Davidson, head of European restructuring at KPMG, explained that funds
of this nature often use "loan-to-own" schemes, which sees them gaining
control of a firm through a debt-for-equity swap.
"We haven't
seen loan-to-own becoming loan-to-bust yet, but I'd be astonished not
to see this in the next 12 months - mostly from small US funds," he
said.
Mr Davidson also claimed that hedge funds are "less
nervous" than traditional lenders when it comes to invoking insolvency
to "crack value out of a situation".
Yesterday, data issued by the Insolvency Service showed a sharp increase in the number of business failures.
The
figure of 4,941 firms going into liquidation during the first three
months of 2009 marked a 56 per cent increase on the same time last year.