Under the agreement, Jefferies and Kennedy Lewis, both based in New York, will provide up to $160 million in equity investment to TCW’s CLO platform to be deployed in multiple CLOs over the next two years.
CLOs are pools of company debt packaged into a sellable product. They are typically made up of assets such as middle-market business loans or loans to private equity firms used for leveraged buyouts.
They are structured into different tranches, or tiers, based on relative risk and returns, with investors that accept greater risk being paid higher interest to compensate.
TCW has closed five CLOs in the last three years and describes itself as a leader in the space. The firm is bullish on the vehicles’ performance in the current market environment despite a wave of downgrades and an uptick on defaults on the company debt underlying CLOs since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic.
“Ironically, sometimes when CLO equity returns appear most attractive, that is when the capital is the most difficult to raise,” TCW Loan Portfolio Manager Drew Sweeney said in a statement provided to the Business Journal. “This partnership will allow us to take advantage of market opportunities.”
Kennedy Lewis and Jefferies appear to also be confident in the opportunities CLOs offer and TCW’s ability to exploit them.
Jason Schechter, Jefferies’ head of CLO origination and trading, said his firm believed that “this investment, coupled with TCW’s historical CLO performance, will firmly cement TCW as a top-tier manager in the CLO space.”
With more than $235 billion in assets under management, TCW is among the largest asset managers based on the West Coast. The company ranked third on the Business Journal’s list of local money managers this year.