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	<title>Strategery Capital Management LLC</title>
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        <![CDATA[Strategery is a unique hedge fund.

It is the largest in the world, with expected initial capital of $700 billion. It has a free and unlimited credit line should it need more. It has no fixed mandate, though it is expected to initially focus on mortgage-backed securities. And it is the only fund backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government. ]]>
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    <pubDate>Sun, 05 Oct 2008 16:04:55 EST</pubDate>
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      <title>News</title>
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&lt;p>We are pleased to announce that as of Oct. 3, 2008 we have officially launched! Here is our press release: &lt;a href="http://www.free-press-release.com/news/200810/1223067213.html">Congress Approves New Hedge Fund&lt;/a> &lt;/p> &lt;p>T-shirts now available. You are required to &lt;a href="http://www.printfection.com/strategery">purchase one&lt;/a> by federal law. Since we are flush with cash, there is no markup or commission for now.&lt;/p> &lt;p>We are rapidly approaching one million hits. Our servers are straining under the traffic. To lighten the load, please visit this site only once and then describe it to others by telephone or courier. Unauthorized repeat bandwidth offenders may be subject to fines and imprisonment.&lt;/p> &lt;p>Our &lt;a href="http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/13865/">RSS feed&lt;/a> is up and running for banks and counterparties to be informed on upcoming auctions and other &lt;strong>&lt;em>Strategery&lt;/em>&lt;/strong> activity.&lt;/p>
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      <pubDate>Sun, 05 Oct 2008 19:10:00 EST</pubDate>
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      <title>Reverse Auction</title>
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&lt;div id="body"> 		&lt;h2>How a Reverse Auction Works&lt;/h2> &lt;p>&lt;strong>&lt;em>Strategery&lt;/em>&lt;/strong> will not only purchase the worst assets available in the market, but it will do so at an inflated price. This is a technical challenge our research team has been able to solve through the use of a &amp;quot;reverse auction.&amp;quot; &lt;/p>&lt;p>A regular auction has one seller and many buyers. A reverse auction has one buyer (&lt;strong>&lt;em>Strategery&lt;/em>&lt;/strong>) and many sellers (domestic and foreign banks, trusts, brokerages, etc.). &lt;/p>&lt;p>We will be buying large baskets of bad loans. Now, a loan to Joe is not exactly the same as a loan to Fred, so you might think it is impossible for banks to compete since their products are so different. You will be pleased to learn that our research department has been able to quantify many of the risk measures. &lt;/p>&lt;p>How do we do it? We make sure that the portfolios the banks are selling us all have similar geographical distributions, credit ratings, and approximate time to maturity. &lt;/p>&lt;p>Beyond that, the differences are basically random, so sometimes the banks will sell us packages that have some surprisingly good loans and sometimes they will sell us less-attractive packages. &lt;/p>&lt;p>After all, what are the chances that a bank will sell us a package that they know contains even worse loans than we think? That wouldn't be a very friendly thing to do.&lt;/p> &lt;h2>An Example&lt;/h2> &lt;p> We announce we are purchasing 20-year sub-prime mortgages in the northeast. Bank A has a package with $100 million such loans outstanding, and so does Bank B, but Bank B happens to know that most of their clients are worse off than they appear. Bank A tries to sell us their package for 80 cents on the dollar when it is really worth 75. Without our excellent reverse auction, we would only overpay by five cents on the dollar.&lt;/p> &lt;p>But Bank B undercuts and offers their package for 74 cents on the dollar, a package which is really only worth 20 cents on the dollar. We accept their offer.&lt;/p> &lt;p>Thus, we are able to pay 54 cents on the dollar above market price instead of just 5 cents. That is the magic of the reverse auction.&lt;/p>	&lt;/div>
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      <pubDate>Sun, 05 Oct 2008 16:04:00 EST</pubDate>
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