Mortgage
lender sparks bid battle
Compass Partners, a New York-based investment company,
made the apparent highest and best bid of $67 million Thursday
for the assets of a mortgage loan fund managed by USA Capital
and a contract to service loans for the bankrupt private
lender.
Bankruptcy Judge Linda Riegle conducted a slow-paced auction
in her courtroom taking bids from three companies, Desert
Capital Real Estate Investment Trust of Henderson, hedge
fund Silver Point Capital of Greenwich, Conn., and Compass.
USA Capital solicited investments from about 6,000 individual
investors around the country and used the money to make
short-term loans to developers, including USA Capital majority
owners Tom Hantges and Joe Milanowski.
USA Capital controlled $962 million in assets for investors
when it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy court protection
in April. While USA Capital was making monthly payments
to investors, many of its loans were not being repaid.
Some investors bought fractional interests in the loans.
Others invested through USA First Trust Deed Fund and USA
Diversified Trust Deed Fund, which served like mutual funds
for these real estate-backed loans.
An interim management team led by Tom Allison has run USA
Capital since the bankruptcy filing.
Silver Point Capital was approved as a "stalking horse,"
or first bidder, with an offer of $46.5 million to buy out
investors in the First Trust Deed Fund. In addition, Silver
Point agreed to take over loan servicing from USA Capital
for other loans.
The auction started Thursday with that $46.5 million bid.
Compass came next with an offer of $57.5 million. The three
bidders took turns usually raising their bid often in $100,000
increments over the previous bid, but sometimes by $1 million
or more. Bidders often made higher bids on the spot, but
they were allowed to privately confer for 20 minutes before
deciding in several instances.
At the end, both Silver Point and Desert Capital passed,
leaving Compass as the apparent high bidder at $67 million.
Attorneys for investors generally expressed satisfaction
with the bidding. Attorney Frank Merola for the First Trust
Deed Fund said he hopes investors in the First Trust Deed
fund will get a check from Compass for the fund's assets
by March. First Trust Deed investors may recover additional
money as a result of anticipated lawsuits against former
insiders at USA Capital.
Part of the money goes to USA Commercial Mortgage, which
previously serviced loans. That will help investors in the
Diversified fund, attorney Marc Levinson said.
Levinson said the auction advances efforts to end the bankruptcy,
reduce legal fees and start recovering assets for the benefit
of Diversified fund investors.
During a hearing Thursday morning, the judge allowed Desert
Capital Real Estate Investment Trust to become the third
bidder.
Some attorneys were concerned about the perception of allowing
Desert Capital to bid, because Paul Hamilton, Desert Capital's
chief investment officer, formerly was a USA Capital executive.
Hamilton, a director of USA Commercial Mortgage, loan broker
for USA Capital and equity owner in affiliated companies,
resigned about one year before USA Capital filed for bankruptcy
court protection in April.
Desert Capital promised to terminate Hamilton's employment
and not bring him back if Desert Capital won the deal.
Merola said: "(Desert Capital's) money is green, and
the best we can do for these investors is get as much money
as possible."