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Saba Capital Management

Saba Capital Management
Private
Industry Investment management
Founded 2009 (2009)
Founder Boaz Weinstein
Headquarters New York City, United States
Products Hedge funds
Website www.sabacapital.com

Saba Capital Management is a credit relative value focused hedge fund firm, established in 2009. The New York City based company is a spin-out of a Deutsche Bank proprietary trading group founded by Boaz Weinstein in 1998.

The firm launched in August 2009 with $140 million and 15 members from Deutsche Bank. In March 2011, Saba was listed as the fastest growing hedge fund manager in 2010 by Absolute Return + Alpha Magazine. As of March 2017, Saba managed $1.7 billion in assets.

Saba's hedge funds manage investments centered on three strategies:

The relative value strategy focuses on identifying dislocations across the capital structure. It utilizes a long / short, market neutral approach in credit and equity markets.

The tail hedge strategy seeks to provide a cost effective portfolio hedge during periods of market stress and dislocation. This is implemented by investing primarily in credit default swaps (“CDS”) on a portfolio of low spread investment grade companies. In addition, Saba opportunistically buys CDS on indices and high yield companies, as well as equity puts and related instruments.

The closed-end fund strategy focuses on securities that are trading at significant discounts to NAV, thereby offering more yield than their underlying fixed income instruments – predominantly high yield bonds and loans.

In March 2017, Saba launched an ETF focused on investing in closed end funds.

In March 2017, Saba launched the Saba Closed-End Funds ETF (Bats: CEFS), an actively managed ETF that seeks to generate high income by investing in closed-end funds trading at a discount to net asset value, and hedging the portfolio’s exposure to rising interest rates.

In 2012, Saba profited from a notable $2-billion loss incurred by JPMorgan on account of a failed investment in credit derivatives attributed to Bruno Iksil.

In 2016, Saba profited substantially from capital structure arbitrage trades in Linn Energy and Chesapeake Energy when it successfully backed the bonds in those companies were highly mispriced relative to the equity.


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