NY Times, Feb. 20 2015
Greek Debt Is Vastly Overstated, an Investor Tells the World
By LANDON THOMAS Jr.

High in a Morgan Stanley office tower, Paul B. Kazarian, one of the 
largest holders of Greek government bonds, was recently trying to 
persuade a room full of investors that Greece’s debt load of 318 billion 
euros was actually a tenth that size.

When you use international accounting standards, he declared, “it 
reduces the value of the debt.”

Yet with Greece’s debt woes whipsawing markets, the conference 
participants were having a hard time wrapping their brains around the 
notion. Not least one panelist, Reza Moghadam, a Morgan Stanley banker 
who, in his previous job at the International Monetary Fund, was the 
point man for the Greek bailouts.

“I don’t think it is as simple as that,” Mr. Moghadam said, as he broke 
into Mr. Kazarian’s monologue. “And really, we should let some other 
people ask questions, too.”

As the new Greek government and Europe engage in tense talks about how 
to pare Greece’s debt burden, which at 175 percent of total economic 
output trails only Japan’s, Mr. Kazarian’s claim that there is no debt 
to reduce has an absurdist feel to it.

After all, the country’s debt, and the brutal austerity measures that 
were imposed in return for a financial lifeline, lie at the heart of the 
dispute between Greece and its creditors. On Friday, European finance 
ministers agreed to extend Greece's bailout for four months.

As Greece and the rest of Europe have often appeared entrenched in their 
positions, Mr. Kazarian’s analysis is a distinctive, if not quixotic 
attempt — it has so far fallen on deaf ears among European policy makers 
and economists — to break the logjam of thinking as to what Europe 
should do about Greece’s debt.

Although Mr. Kazarian pushes it to an extreme, his main proposition — 
that Greece’s debt is not as burdensome as it might appear — is not 
outlandish. The country must make some very large lump-sum payments this 
year, but in the future, Greece will pay interest rates of 2 percent and 
below on debt that matures in 30 to 40 years.

“Paul has a point, which I share to a large extent,” said Daniel Gros, 
an influential German economist at the Center for European Policy 
Studies in Brussels. “Namely, that given the low interest rates, Greek 
debt is sustainable.”

Over the last two years, Mr. Kazarian, 59, has been aggressively 
promoting his idea, convinced that if he can just bring just a few 
economists, journalists or analysts over to his side, many other 
doubters will follow.

He has met with Greek finance ministers in Athens, top policy makers in 
Berlin, officials at the European Central Bank in Frankfurt and 
economists at the International Monetary Fund in Washington.

This week, he was in Brussels, closely tracking the Greek debt talks, 
and he is planning another trip to Athens soon to push his ideas on the 
new Greek government.

He has put together a team of 100 economists, accountants, public 
relations experts and lawyers to help him advance his agenda, via 
conferences, newspaper advertisements, individual consultations and the 
churning out of endless briefing books and memos in multiple languages.

Wiry and intense, Mr. Kazarian can come across as slightly offbeat. With 
the pink oxford shirts he wears every day, he deploys a plastic pocket 
protector that holds his collection of six pens and markers. His mien 
can veer from professorial to a bit manic, especially when he senses 
that someone is not quite grasping his line of reasoning.

Indeed, when he is working on a deal, there is nothing but the deal. His 
work days are 20 hours long (sleep comes from 2 to 4:30 in the morning), 
with breaks taken for morning Mass and a spin on a stationary bike 
(where he continues to pore over documents).

But he is no crank.

In the late 1980s, he quit a banking job at Goldman Sachs to start his 
own investment company, Japonica Partners, named after the quiet street 
in Pawtucket, R.I., where he grew up. (Mr. Kazarian works out of 
Providence, R.I.)

Seeded by two investment giants of that era — Michael Steinhardt and 
Michael Price — he was given a mandate to hunt out companies drowning in 
debt, turn them around and sell them at a profit.

This is precisely what Mr. Kazarian did in 1990 with his hostile 
takeover of Allegheny International, the manufacturing conglomerate, 
which subsequently became Sunbeam. He ran Sunbeam for three years before 
being ousted in a management shake-up.

The Allegheny buyout, which reaped about $1.6 billion in profit, came to 
be seen as seminal for that era and was turned into a case study at 
Harvard Business School.

In many ways, Mr. Kazarian is following the same playbook with Greece. 
He has scooped up a large chunk of the discounted bonds and is now 
trying to make the case, by persuading and educating, that the market is 
mistaken in how it is valuing his bonds.

Mr. Kazarian has spent two years and millions of dollars on his 
campaign, but within the small world of Greek bond investors, he remains 
a mystery. He says he did much of his buying in 2012, when bond prices 
were rock bottom, but Greek bankers and government officials say they 
have seen no sign of him.

“We just don’t talk about our investments,” Mr. Kazarian said, adding 
that he has not sold a single bond to date. “But it would not be a lie 
to say that we are one of the larger investors in Greek bonds.”

Mr. Kazarian’s argument stands or falls on a pretty simple accounting 
principle. If Greece’s debt were to be measured under the International 
Public Sector Accounting Standards, which most governments use, then its 
debt figure would need to be adjusted downward, instead of being 
recognized at its face value of 318 billion euros.

That is because there have been a series of adjustments to Greece’s debt 
over the years, including a restructuring, debt maturity extensions and 
interest rate reductions that should, if international accounting rules 
were applied, bring down the debt’s value.

By doing that and taking into account the assets owned by Greece, the 
overall net debt figure falls sharply to 32 billion euros.

“How do you change the terms of a debt contract and ignore the impact on 
the debt?” Mr. Kazarian asked in an interview. “You can’t. You just 
can’t — the size of the debt must come down to its economic reality.”

Over time, his hard-charging style has mellowed some. In the Allegheny 
deal, he challenged a rival executive to a fight and barged uninvited 
into board meetings, as described in the book “The Vulture Investors” by 
Hilary Rosenberg.

Still, his trademark persistence remains.

After the brushoff from Mr. Moghadam at the conference in New York, Mr. 
Kazarian flew to London, where the Morgan Stanley banker is based, and 
was able to pin him down for a dinner.

And in Greece, where he spent six months last year, Mr. Kazarian became 
such a pest that finance ministry officials in Athens began referring to 
him as the Armenian visitor — an old Greek expression for someone who 
overstays his welcome, although in Mr. Kazarian’s case, he happens to be 
Armenian as well.

“This is what we do — we educate,” said Mr. Kazarian, who says that his 
bet on Greek bonds has been his most profitable investment ever.

But it remains to be seen if 1980s-style takeover tactics have a place 
in today’s sovereign debt crisis. For example, Mr. Kazarian’s skills 
were honed on corporate, not government, balance sheets. Moreover, as a 
takeover artist, he had a fairly focused target: the board of the 
company in his sights.

Now, he must win over technocrats, economists and government officials 
across Europe, most of whom take a fairly dim view of distressed debt 
investors as a general species.

Success on that front would mean that all the deeply discounted Greek 
bonds that Mr. Kazarian has been accumulating over the Last two years 
would soar in value, giving him a multibillion-dollar investment payoff.

Eventually, he is convinced, they will see the light and write down the 
value of their loans.

“You are suffocating a country with a figure that has no relevance,” Mr. 
Kazarian said. Greece’s creditors, he says, should just take the loss 
and move on.

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