Paulson Credit Fund Rises Fivefold on Subprime Bets (Update1)

By Jenny Strasburg

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Paulson & Co.'s biggest credit hedge fund rose fivefold
in 2007 after the New York-based investment firm with $20 billion in assets
under management bet U.S. subprime-mortgage defaults would soar.

The $4.5 billion Credit Opportunities fund, started last year, gained 26.7
percent in August, according to a Paulson investor. Credit Opportunities II, a
newer $2.3 billion fund, is up more than threefold after a 32 percent return
last month. The firm, founded by John Paulson in 1994, more than doubled its
assets since the start of the year.

U.S. home-loan foreclosures rose to a record 0.65 percent in the second
quarter, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association in Washington. U.S.
asset-backed debt including some mortgage-backed bonds fell 3.5 percent last
month following a 1.2 percent drop in July, the two largest declines in at
least 13 years, according to Merrill Lynch & Co.'s broadest index that includes
bonds linked to subprime or second mortgages.

``These guys made a big bet at the right time, and they're being rewarded for
it,'' said David Nelson, chief executive officer of Greenwich,
Connecticut-based DC Nelson Asset Management LLC, which isn't invested in the
Paulson funds.

Hedge funds run by Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Tudor Investment Corp and D.E.
Shaw & Co. declined amid widening credit spreads and stock-market volatility.
Losses in subprime- related holdings forced managers including New York-based
Bear Stearns Cos. to close funds.

SAC Capital

SAC Capital Advisors LLC, the Stamford, Connecticut-based hedge-fund firm run
by Steven Cohen, raised $1 billion from investors last month as its biggest
fund fell 3 percent. The $8 billion SAC Capital International Fund finished
August up 10 percent for the year, according to an investor who declined to be
identified.

In August, Paulson increased 5.2 percent in its event-driven fund that invests
in debt of distressed companies, extending that fund's 2007 advance to 69
percent.

A spokesman for John Paulson declined to comment.

Before starting his hedge-fund firm, Paulson, 51, was general partner at New
York-based investment firm Gruss Partners. He was a managing director at Bear
Stearns from 1984 to 1988 after earning a master's degree from Harvard Business
School in Boston.

Managers had their second-best fund-raising quarter from April to June,
attracting $58.7 billion globally from investors, according to industry tracker
Hedge Fund Research Inc. of Chicago. Hedge funds oversee more than $1.7
trillion, almost triple the amount five years ago.

Hedge funds are private, largely unregulated pools of capital whose managers
can buy or sell any assets and participate substantially in profits from money
invested.

To contact the reporters on this story: Jenny Strasburg in New York at
[EMAIL PROTECTED] .

Last Updated: September 7, 2007 17:14 EDT



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