Riley: Japonica, A Mystery to Rhode Islanders
Michael G. Riley, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™
Riley: Japonica, A Mystery to Rhode Islanders

Japonica‘s founder Paul Kazarian made headlines when they announced on June 3, 2013 , that Japonica was offering to buy as much as €2.9 billion ($3.8 billion) of Greek government debt, about 10 percent of all outstanding bonds. The media at the time handled this news very strangely. It was reported worldwide in the Wall Street Journal, Financial Times and Business Week.
It quickly became apparent though, that there was significant skepticism on Wall Street about who Japonica was and whether or not they had the experience or firepower to pull off this extraordinary attempt. There were very few stories in Rhode Island media about the bid and the local media seemed to know little about Kazarian or Japonica even though they had offices in Kennedy Plaza and were from Pawtucket.
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Several different news outlets have claimed that Japonica is the second largest owner of Greek Debt behind the estimated $6 billion held by pension funds. Still today its unclear what Japonica owns and who are its backers. Is their investment in trouble? That seems unlikely with the long term Greek bonds trading around 54 cents on the dollars the bonds have gone up modestly since 2013 but trade well below the 85 cents on the dollar level that Kazarian had predicted for end of 2014.
Our goal is to find as much as we can about Japonica. We know this much, Japonica never discusses its investors or where financing comes from. Japonica isn’t registered as an investment adviser with the Securities and Exchange Commission, a requirement for most U.S. hedge funds and private-equity firms under the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial regulation law. The firm isn’t required to register, because it doesn’t charge fees or provide investment advice.
(this is the first of a 4 part series)

