Just as leveraged buyout funds were the outstanding asset class of the early 1990s and venture capital funds led the pack in the latter half of the 1990s, the first five years of the millennium will belong to distressed funds, according to Wilbur Ross, chairman and ceo of WL Ross and Co. And the distressed funds that will really succeed are those funds equipped to deal with the defaults of smaller companies, Ross said. That is because the majority of defaults in the current crop involve less than $250 million in liabilities, and these smaller companies are under-researched by Wall Street, which does not have the analytical resources to deal with one new bankruptcy every two or three days, he explained. As a result, the vast bulk of sell-side research is focused on a handful of big names, like Kmart and Enron.
June 30, 2002