Episodes
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In Episode 4 of The Octus Download, hosts Jason Sanjana and Kevin Eckhardt tackle a volatile week in credit markets, corporate scandals, and cultural reflections.
They begin with a breakdown of the unexpected ruling in the Johnson & Johnson talc case, before analyzing the financial restructuring behind Hooters’ bankruptcy and the executive pay scandal brewing at Macy’s. Market volatility sets the backdrop for these events, raising questions about investor confidence and business model sustainability.
The core of the episode features “Let Me Explain: LMEs”, a deep dive into liability management transactions led by Octus Founder & CEO Kent Collier and Head of Liability Management Julian Bulaon. Together, they unpack the nuances of Omniblockers, the critical role of deal size, and the rise of consensual LMEs, offering a masterclass on how these transactions are reshaping modern credit strategies.
To close, the conversation shifts gears with a cultural lens, reflecting on the moral complexity and wealth dynamics in The White Lotus finale—and how prestige TV sometimes mirrors the drama of the financial world.
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Hosted by Jason Sanjana & Kevin EckhardtSegment Guests Kent Collier, Julian BulaonEdited by Tanya HubbardProduced by Tanya HubbardA Production of The Octus Podcast Network
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Joanne Fabrics went bankrupt. Forever 21 collapsed again. Walgreens just sold for billions. But the brands? Still alive and kicking. At [01:15], Jason and Kevin break down why profitable companies fail and how private equity pulls it off [03:50]. By [05:45], they explain how today’s retail brands survive without stores—or employees.
At [12:00], they dive into why bankruptcy courts keep approving fantasy projections. Then it gets weird: at [20:00], they explore a Mars colony run by a corporate board, and [22:45] ask if corporations are replacing governments.
Things wrap with White Lotus guilt spirals [27:30], Miami pickleball feuds [35:00], and a reminder that retail might be fiction—but the consequences are real.
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Episodes manquant?
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This episode dives into the latest Liability Management Exercise (LME) loopholes shaking up debt markets (2:14), and why the Fifth Circuit’s ruling in Serta is just the beginning of a wild restructuring playbook (5:41). We then break down the endgame for Purdue Pharma and Johnson & Johnson’s talc saga (15:07)—are these settlements real resolutions, or just high-priced damage control?
But that’s not all—are vacations the new luxury investment? (39:22) We analyze why high-net-worth consumers are ditching designer goods for exclusive getaways, and how White Lotus perfectly captures the financial elite’s twisted world (42:05).
Stick around for our most unhinged sponsor ad yet (47:53)—because nothing says financial markets like a totally not addictive 24-hour performance pill from the makers of, well, you already know.
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Welcome to the debut episode of The Octus Download, where we break down the biggest credit market stories, cut through the financial noise, and keep things refreshingly real. In this episode, we dive straight into the Trump administration’s shocking $3 trillion federal funding freeze (5:00) and its chaotic impact on Medicaid, state budgets, and the broader financial markets (7:06). We analyze how restructuring professionals are already bracing for the ripple effects (9:42) and discuss the latest bankruptcy shake-up. Liberated Brands’ sudden collapse and its connection to Volcom, Quiksilver, and the legacy of liability management exercises (18:51). Plus, a wild theory: was the Luka Dončić trade an actual fraudulent transfer? (24:13). And finally, we dissect the eerie relevance of Severance, the TV show that might be a little too real for corporate life (32:05). Stick around for our closing segment on the most high-stakes parking drama in Miami—can you legally park at the CVS on Grand Avenue during the farmers market? (38:26)