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In todays (holiday) edition, we go deeper into the mystery of 777 Partners, unearthing the U.S. insu͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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November 23, 2023
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Business

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Liz Hoffman
Liz Hoffman

Hi, and welcome to Semafor Business, Thanksgiving edition.

We’d planned to take a story break for the holiday, but if you’ve been following my coverage of 777, you know that it’s a global story. And it’s not a holiday everywhere — a journalistic lesson that the FT’s Will Lewis taught American reporters when he scooped the Exxon-Mobil merger on Thanksgiving 1998.

The question since 777 started buying European sports teams a few years ago has been: Where did its money come from? Even in the easy fundraising environment of the late 2010s, it’s hard for virtual unknowns to show up with billions of dollars.

Last week, we broke the news that much of the firm’s cash comes from a captive Bermuda reinsurer. But today we trace the money back another step, and uncover the silent partner that’s been propping up 777 for years. Read on for the scoop — and don’t stop before you get to the Miami real-estate roundtrip.

On a personal note, we at Semafor have been at this for just over a year, and I want to thank all of you — for reading, for writing back, and for sharing tips. And a huge thanks to my editor, Gina Chon, whose fingerprints are all over this newsletter every week, and whose reporting is often in it. More to come. (Please send tips!)

In the meantime, here’s a handy guide to explaining the OpenAI mess to your elderly guests: “OK so the Temple was running low on Wizards.”

The Tape

Sam is back… 6,000 words on Leon Black’s downfall… Alibaba reports “rumor” of mass layoffs to the police… Tiger Global changes its stripes… No one will trade with China’s biggest bank after hack… Nvidia’s 200% revenue jump was already priced in… Boeing’s latest 737 MAX jets are (almost) in the air… Linda Yaccarino’s son is X’s new political-ad man… The wooden camembert boxes are saved…

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Liz Hoffman

The silent partner behind 777’s buying spree

THE SCOOP

777 Partners, the sports investor whose finances are now under intense global scrutiny, has had a silent partner for years: the chief executive of a U.S. insurance company, whose customers have unwittingly funded 777’s rapid expansion through a web of previously unreported transactions.

Kenneth King, who runs a network of insurance and investment firms, has steered hundreds of millions of dollars for years to 777, whose bid for one of England’s oldest soccer teams has raised questions both among sports executives and regulators about where, exactly, its money comes from.

King’s firm, A-CAP, sold customers’ insurance policies to 777’s reinsurance arm, separately loaned at least $400 million to 777 Partners itself and various portfolio companies, and sits on the committee that oversees its investments, according to people familiar with the matter, and internal and public documents.

One loan last year from an A-CAP insurer to 777 was quickly re-lent to a Miami shell company controlled by King to buy an $11 million beachfront condo, documents show. Other loans have helped 777 meet last-minute deadlines to fund its portfolio companies, and at least one covered payroll for 777 itself, people familiar with the transactions said.

Insurers have an obligation to their policyholders to safeguard their money, investing conservatively enough to ensure they can pay claims in the future. A-CAP’s involvement with 777 has tied its customers’ retirements to a payday lender, a Canadian budget airline, and European sports teams, among a grab bag of esoteric holdings.

A-CAP is controlled by King, who is also its chairman and CEO. The New York-based firm owns at least five insurance companies operating in several states including Nebraska and Utah.

In addition to providing financial firepower for 777’s dealmaking, King has also weighed in on how that money is spent, some of the people said. He sits on 777’s steering committee, and portfolio company executives told Semafor their business plans and requests for cash often went to King for review.

The New York Times previously reported some of A-CAP’s dealings with 777, including loans to Everton as the takeover process drags on. New documents show how enmeshed the two firms have been since at least 2019, just after 777 began its global sports buying spree, and how King appeared to benefit personally from the relationship.

“A-Cap is one of a number of lenders to 777 and its portfolio companies,” a 777 spokesman said. “As is standard practice in the industry, 777 is bound by confidentiality regarding the specifics of its loan activity.”

A-CAP and King did not respond to requests for comment.

Reuters/Peter Cziborra

KNOW MORE

Reinsurers don’t sell insurance policies themselves, but rather buy them from insurers looking to offload risk. So relationships with primary insurers like A-CAP are key to reinsurers like 777 Re., which agree to pay out claims in the future and often take control of customers’ cash in the meantime.

That was 777’s pitch to investors. That cash — premiums for life insurance or annuities — would be invested into deals that 777 sourced and charged fees on, according to a 2021 fundraising presentation viewed by Semafor.

In 2019, an insurance company owned by A-CAP offloaded $310 million of policyholders’ cash under such an agreement to 777 Re., according to a state filing. In 2020, another A-CAP insurance arm ceded an unspecified amount of additional money.

Separately, A-CAP was quickly becoming one of 777’s biggest lenders. By 2021, the balance hit $400 million, making A-CAP its second-largest lender, according to an internal document viewed by Semafor. If 777 defaulted, A-CAP could seize “all asset[s]” not pledged elsewhere.

One loan in particular has been whispered about inside 777.

Last November, A-CAP lent about $14 million to 777 Partners, according to people familiar with the transaction. About $4 million went to cover that week’s payroll and $1 million was sent back to A-CAP, the people said, leaving $9 million.

The next day, 777 lent $9 million to a shell company to purchase a waterfront condo in Miami. The buyer, according to mortgage documents, was King.

LIZ’S VIEW

It’s time to stop calling 777 a “mystery investor” as we, the Times, and others have been doing. I still have a lot of questions, but the basic mechanics here are becoming clearer as I keep reporting.

A trove of documents and people close to the companies show that this is asset management on steroids: raising money from unusual places (with a huge reliance on one or two off-the-beaten-path sources, like King’s company) and investing it in equally unusual places (B-league sports teams, a budget airline that is “battling to survive,” a payday lender).

That half of those investments were created by the 777 itself raises eyebrows. It certainly tests the prudential limits of related-party dealings. But it isn’t all that confusing. It’s a lot easier, not to mention more profitable, to have a thing you own invest in another thing you own, especially if you’re charging management fees on one or both ends.

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Evidence

Thanksgiving dinner costs less this year, though only slightly. If you’re having mashed potatoes, which are inexplicably omitted from the Farm Bureau’s menu, add $3.57.

Taking the long view, one of the underappreciated economic stories of the past century is just how much cheaper food has gotten. In 1900, half of the average U.S. household budget went to food; today it’s about 10%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. (Grocery prices are a different story.)

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Live Journalism

On Dec. 5, Semafor’s Founding Editor-at-Large Steve Clemons will host Axel Springer CEO Mathias Döpfner for a virtual conversation about the role of trade in autocracies. Döpfner’s latest book, The Trade Trap, argues that free trade has strengthened dictators while undermining a rules-based world order. RSVP to get the link.

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