Asset ManagerRIA · CRD 160624SEC-RegisteredPrivate Fund Adviser

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Prosperity Capital Management

Founded in 1996, Prosperity Capital Management (“PCM”) is an institutional investment manager employing a fundamental value, active and engaged shareholder...

Prosperity Capital Management logo

Prosperity Capital Management

Founded in 1996, Prosperity Capital Management (“PCM”) is an institutional investment manager employing a fundamental value, active and engaged shareholder approach.

General information

Firm type

Generalist

Year founded

2011

AUM

Undisclosed

Location

Region

Latin America

Country

Cayman Islands

City

Grand Cayman

Corporate office

Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands

Sector focus

RestructuringTurnaround

Frequently asked questions

What is Prosperity Capital Management's core investment strategy?

The firm runs a concentrated restructuring and turnaround strategy. It targets companies experiencing operational distress, balance-sheet overhang, or liquidity crises, and seeks to invest either through distressed debt purchases or direct equity injections that enable operational turnarounds. The approach implies active involvement in portfolio companies rather than passive credit selection.

How does the Grand Cayman domicile affect the firm's operations?

Cayman Islands incorporation is standard for international distressed and special-situations funds. It provides tax neutrality for non-US and cross-border investors, and the jurisdiction's funds regulatory framework allows flexible structuring for deal-by-deal vehicles and concentrated positions that a US or EU-domiciled fund might find harder to execute.

Does Prosperity Capital Management invest via fund structures or deal-by-deal vehicles?

Public filings do not clarify whether Prosperity operates a pooled fund or raises capital on a deal-by-deal basis. Restructuring boutiques of this profile frequently use special purpose vehicles (SPVs) for individual acquisitions, particularly when bringing in co-investors aligned to a specific turnaround thesis.

What types of counterparties does Prosperity typically engage in a restructuring?

In a typical turnaround mandate, the firm would negotiate with existing lenders, bondholders, trade creditors, and occasionally sovereign entities when state-owned enterprises are involved. The focus on active restructuring implies direct engagement with creditor committees and management teams rather than buying claims in secondary market trading.

Are there publicly known portfolio companies or recent deals?

No specific portfolio holdings, completed restructurings, or realized exits have been publicly disclosed or reported in financial press. This is consistent with many small restructuring managers who do not issue press releases and whose deals remain private even post-restructuring, barring litigation or regulatory filings.

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