Sean Healey says that
Third Avenue's [
profile] financial and legal woes won't hurt
AMG much at all. Plus, he sees the stumbling value shop turning things around and not having "any legal exposure", either. Meanwhile, more class-action lawyers are circling Third Avenue.
| Sean Healey AMG Chairman, Chief Executive Officer | |
Yesterday on AMG's Q4 2015 earnings call (see
Seeking Alpha's transcript of the call), AMG chairman and CEO Healey tackled the woes of AMG affiliate Third Avenue head on, in response to questions from Deutsche Bank Securities analyst
Brian Bedell. Tim McLaughlin of
Reuters reported on Healey's remarks.
Healey acknowledged that "it has been a difficult period for Third Avenue." Yet he made several points downplaying the Third Avenue situation.. One, he said, "there is a clear trend toward the outflows moderating."
Two, he feels "terrific about the firm's prospects and their financial and operating position". He has "every confidence" in the Third Avenue management team's ability to "generate excellent performance," which will translate into Third Avenue's rough patch "bottoming and then recovering."
Three, it's not like Third Avenue is a huge part of AMG as it is. Healey told the analysts that "Third Avenue is, from a run rate earnings contribution standpoint, 1% of our earnings, so really no impact to AMG's financials from their results."
Fourth, putative class-action lawsuits be damned, Healey thinks the Third Avenue folks are in the clear legally.
"You didn't ask this, but to the extent anybody has a question, we don't think that Third Avenue has any legal exposure around the Focused Credit Fund closure, et cetera," Healey said on the call.
And fifth, Healey sees as protected from Third Avenue's legal fights.
"We are completely comfortable that AMG has no legal exposure at all, given our structure and approach,"
Healey said.
Meanwhile, last week San Francisco-based
Sparer Law Group filed its own
lawsuit on behalf of
Third Avenue Focused Credit Fund investors,
claiming that the prospectus and other materials for the fund "contained material false or misleading statements regarding the Fund's liquidity." The new suit came 12 days after a New York law firm
filed a putative class-action accusing the Third Avenue folks of gross negligence for not maintaing adequate liquidity to protect the now-defunct
Third Avenue Focused Credit Fund.
"This was a hedge fund masquerading as a mutual fund," states
Alan Sparer, lead counsel for the new suit.
Other law firms are getting in on the fight, too. Those firms include: New York-based
Levi & Korsinsky, Los Angeles-based
Glancy Prongay & Murray, New York-based
Gainey McKenna & Egleston, San Diego-based
Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd, and New York-based
Bernstein Liebhard. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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