The Bailout of Robert Mugabe – How Wall Street Money Led to Intimidation, Torture and Death in Zimbabwe

Four days later, Camec announced it was using the money it raised to purchase a joint venture with the Zimbabwe Mining Development Corp., or ZMDC, Mugabe’s state-owned mining company. The joint venture owned the platinum stakes on the Great Dyke that had been taken back just a few weeks earlier from Anglo American. The price included $5 million in cash; Camec issued shares to partners whose identities were shielded by a shell company based in the British Virgin Islands; and $100 million to Mugabe’s government. Camec said the $100 million was a cash loan “to comply with its contractual obligations to the government of Zimbabwe” for the platinum claims. It said the money would be repaid out of ZMDC’s share of future platinum earnings. Camec’s balance sheets for the period make clear that funding for the platinum rights came from the private transactions involving Och-Ziff.

– From the excellent Bloomberg article, The Hedge Fund and the Despot 

The $100 million figure mentioned above that flowed directly to Zimbabwe’s brutal dictator Robert Mugabe was more than just a cash infusion to a corrupt dictator. Rather, it was a veritable political lifeline to a desperate and vulnerable despot. Facing defeat in the initial round of elections to the opposition, and with the nation’s currency hyper-inflating, the only thing he had at his disposal were valuable platinum assets that were at the time held by Anglo American Platinum. So Mugabe did what any desperate tyrant would do. He expropriated the assets from Anglo-American and immediately put them on the market to raise money to crush his opposition. Enter Wall Street.

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The Carlyle Group is the Latest “Smart Money” Investor to Ditch the Buy-to-Rent Trade

At first, the rise in residential real estate prices across the U.S. was hard to explain. The economy remained in the dumps, while college kids were saddled with debts and poor paying jobs. A large portion of the demographic that typically enters the first home market was simply put, not in the market. Pretty soon it became obvious what was happening. Insider types and “smart money” was simply buying up every property they could find in order to turn around and rent them to the average citizen who had just been priced out of the market due their all cash bids. Add to this tens of billions of dollars in foreign laundered money and voilà, a new housing bubble was born.

However, as more and more lemmings began to chase the trade, initial investors have started to get nervous. First it was Och Ziff, then OakTree, then Carrington and finally now perhaps the most infamous of all insider private equity firms, the Carlyle Group. So now we have four well known and respected investors actively and publicly trying to exit the trade. As usual, they are selling to suckers such as life-insurance companies and real estate investment trusts.

From Bloomberg:

Carlyle Group LP (CG), the private-equity firm with more than a third of its $2.3 billion U.S. real estate fund in apartments, is reducing holdings of multifamily housing as rent growth slows from a post-recession surge.

Apartment-rent growth is slowing as the U.S. homebuying market rebounds and a wave of multifamily building adds to supply. In the third quarter, tenants on average paid 3 percent more than a year earlier after landlord concessions, down from 3.9 percent annual growth in effective rents in 2012, research firm Reis Inc. (REIS) said in a report today.

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