private equity
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Private Equity. Private Equity. Private equity can be broadly defined to include the following different forms of investment: - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Private Equity
1 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Private Equity Private equity can be broadly defined to include the following
different forms of investment:Leveraged Buyout: Leveraged buyout (LBO) refers to the purchase
of all or most of a company or a business unit by using equity from a small group of investors in combination with a significant amount of debt. The targets of LBOs are typically mature companies that generate strong operating cash flow
Growth Capital: Growth capital typically refers to minority equity investments in mature companies that need capital to expand or restructure operations, finance an acquisition or enter a new market, without a change of control of the company
Mezzanine Capital: Mezzanine capital refers to an investment in subordinated debt or preferred stock of a company, without taking voting control of the company. Often these securities have attached warrants or conversion rights into common stock
Venture Capital: Venture capital refers to equity investments in less mature non-public companies to fund the launch, early development or expansion of a business
2 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Private Equity – focus on LBO Although private equity can be considered to include all four of
these investment activities, it is common for private equity to be the principal descriptor for LBO activity
Investment firms that engage in LBO activity are called private equity firms, buyout firms or financial sponsors
The term financial sponsor comes from the role a private equity firm has as the “sponsor”, or provider, of the equity component in an LBO, as well as the orchestrator of all aspects of the LBO transaction, including negotiating the purchase price and securing debt financing to complete the purchase
Private equity firms are considered “financial buyers” because they don’t bring synergies to an acquisition, as opposed to “strategic buyers”, who are generally competitors of a target company and will benefit from synergies when they acquire or merge with the target
3 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Leveraged BuyoutsThe purchased company's balance sheet is
leveraged to reduce the investor's cash commitment.
The LBO firm will seek to exit their investment within 3-7 yearsExit strategies are principally M&A sales or IPOsTargeted IRRs are >20%
Prospective LBO candidates commonly include:Divisions of large corporations which become
free-standingPrivate companies acquired from foundersPublicly held companies that are taken private
4 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Characteristics of a Private Equity Transaction
a company or a business unit is acquired by a private equity investment fund that has secured debt and equity funding from institutional investors such as pension funds, insurance companies, endowments, fund of funds, sovereign wealth funds, hedge funds and banks, or from high net worth individuals
The high debt levels utilized to fund the transaction increases the return on equity for the private equity buyer, with debt categorized as senior debt and subordinated debt
If the target company is a public company, the buyout is “going private”. The newly private company will be resold in the future (typically 3 to 7 years) through an IPO or private sale to another company
Most private equity firms’ targeted internal rate of return (IRR) during the holding period for their investment has historically been above 20%
The general partners commit capital to the transaction with limited partners
Management of the target company usually also have a meaningful capital exposure to the transaction
5 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Target Companies for Private Equity Transactions For an LBO transaction to be successful, the target
company must generate a significant amount of cash flow to pay high debt interest and principal payments and, sometimes, pay dividends to the private equity shareholders. Here are the main characteristics: Motivated and competent managementRobust and stable cash flowLeveragable balance sheetLow capital expendituresAsset sales and cost cuttingQuality assets
6 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
History of PEThe first LBO transaction was completed in 1955Warren Buffet and Nelson Peltz made leveraged
investmentsKohlerg Kravis & Roberts (KKR)In 1980s, LBOs were known as corporate raidsMichael Milker and junk bondsFew LBOs during 1990sIn 2000s (before the crisis), grow in LBOs againBy the end of 2007, no debt available to support
large private equity transactions Page 289-292
7 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Participants Private Equity Firm: also called LBO firm, buyout firm or
financial sponsor Investment Banks
Introduce potential acquisition targets to PE firmsHelp negotiate acquisition priceProvide loans or arrange bond financingArrange exit transaction
Investors: also called Limited Partners Management
Co-invest with the PE firm: both will do very well if there is a successful exit
Accept lower cash compensation, but also receive options and other forms of incentive compensation
8 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Capitalization of Acquired Company
Portfolio Company Capitalization
• Debt (~60-70% of overall cap structure)o Senior bank debt, two types:
Revolving credit facility (Revolver) which can be paid down and re-borrowed as needed Term debt (senior and subordinated) with floating rates
o Junior debt, two types: High yield (typically public markets) Mezzanine debt (subordinated notes, typically sold to banks, institutions and hedge funds) Other key features:
– Warrants– Payment-in-kind (PIK) toggle allows no interest payment and increase in principal
• Equity (~30-40% of overall cap structure)o Preferred stocko Common stock
9 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Pay Down Debt During Holding Period
LBO Objective: Pay Down Debt During Holding Period
Equity
Debt
Initial
Equity
Debt
Future
$350
$650
$725
$375
$1,000
$1,100
Initial: Acquired for 8.0x LTM EBITDA of $125.0
Future: Sold for 8.0x LTM EBITDA of $137.5
Source: Training the Street, Inc.
10 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Creating High IRR From Investment
LBO: Three Ways to Create Returns
Assume the Target company was acquired for 8.0x LTM EBITDA of $125.0
Note 1: Total Debt - Cumulative Excess Cash to Repay Debt = Net DebtSource: Training the Street, Inc.
1. Deleveraging2. Deleverage & Improve Margins
3. Deleverage,Improve Margins & Multiple Expansion
Sources of Funds
Total Debt $650.0 $650.0 $650.0
Total Equity 350.0 350.0 350.0
Total $1,000.0 $1,000.0 $1,000.0
Year 5 Assumptions
Cumulative Excess Cash to Repay Debt $167.6 $212.3 $212.3
Projected EBITDA 125.0 164.5 164.5
Assumed Exit Multiple 8.0x 8.0x 9.0x
Transaction Value 1,000.0 1,316.0 1,480.5
+/- Net Debt1 (482.4) (437.7) (437.7)
Equity Value $517.6 $878.2 $1,042.8
IRR Returns (5-YrExit) 8.1% 20.2% 24.4%
11 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Assets Under Management (AUM)Private Equity Assets Under Management Reached $1.2 Trillion in 2008Leveraged buyout assets under management 1, 2003 – 2008, $ in billions
Note 1: Assets under management defined as sum of funds raised in the current year plus the previous four years.Source: McKinsey Global Institute; Preqin
225 243 269398
553750
134 143183
241
293
399
6 1322
32
45
70
4 24
8
15
30
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Rest of WorldAsiaEuropeNorth America
$401$478
$679
$906
$1,249
$399
+38%
12 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Assets Under Management (AUM)
2005 Global Allocations to Private Equity LBO Funds by Type of Limited Partner
Note 1: Assets come from pensions, other institutions, and wealthy individuals.Note 2: Includes wealthy individuals.Source: McKinsey Global Institute; Preqin
Private equity fund of funds1
37%
Public pension funds23%
Corporate pension funds
10%
Insurance companies
7%
Endowments / foundations
6%
Investment companies
5%
Banks4%
Other2
8%
13 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Changing Cost of Debt
Private Equity Deals Post-Credit Crisis: More Expensive Debt
Average Spread of Leverage Buyout Loans (bps over LIBOR)
Source: Standard & Poor’s
97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 2H-08
+250
+300
+350
+400
+450
+200
Credit Crisis
14 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Availability of DebtDebt Available to Private Equity Dropped 96% from Q1 2007 to Q4 2008U.S. and European syndicated corporate debt issued to financial sponsors, $ in billions
Note: Figures may not sum due to rounding.Source: McKinsey Global Institute; Dealogic
6282
60
101
175
128 125 137
38 4118 6
72
75
79
51
108
142
7524
31 25
207
Q1-06 Q2-06 Q3-06 Q4-06 Q1-07 Q2-07 Q3-07 Q4-07 Q1-08 Q2-08 Q3-08 Q4-08
Europe
North America
$134
$157$138
$151
$283$270
$200
$161
$68 $66
$37$12
-96%
15 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Fancy terms Bridge loans – intermediate financing for a PE fund to
facilitate an acquisition until permanent debt is obtained. Equity bridges – loans provided by banks to temporarily
cover the equity commitment of a PE fund Covenant-lite loans: eliminate borrowers to maintain
certain financial ratios PIK toggle: offers a borrower with a choice regarding how
to pay accrued interest: 1) pay interest completely in cash, 2) pay interest completely “in-kind” by adding to the principal amount
Club transactions – co-invest in a target company Stub equity – let public shareholders of a target continue
to own equity in a company that is purchased by PE funds.
L7: Private Equity: Ch16&1916
Teaming Up With Management Private equity firms typically make arrangements with
management of a target company regarding terms of employment with the surviving company, post-closing option grants and rollover equity (the amount of stock that management must purchase to create economic exposure to the transaction) prior to executing definitive agreements with the target
Teaming up with management can potentially trigger a target’s takeover defense, including poison pills, if management owns more than 15% of the target’s stock.
Poison pill: aka shareholder rights plan. The typical shareholder rights plan involves a scheme whereby shareholders will have the right to buy more shares at a discount if one shareholder buys a certain percentage of the company's shares.
Management buyout – MBO Page 296
17 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Leveraged Recapitalization A leveraged recapitalization of a private equity fund portfolio
company involves the issuance of debt by the company some time after the acquisition is completed, with the proceeds of the debt transaction used to fund a large cash dividend to the private equity owner
This action increases risks for the portfolio company by adding debt, but enhances the returns for the private equity fund
Although the provider of the debt in a leveraged recapitalization is undertaking considerable risk, they are generally paid for this incremental risk through high interest payments and fees
Employees and communities can also be harmed if the increased leverage results in destabilization of the company because of inability to meet interest and principal payments (employees can lose their jobs and communities can lose their tax base if the company is dissolved through a bankruptcy process)
18 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Secondary Market A secondary market has developed for private equity as banks,
and other financial institutions attempt to sell their private equity investments to reduce the volatility of earnings and rebalance portfolios
In addition, individuals and institutional investors are also sellers of limited partnership interests in private equity funds
Secondary market sales fall into one of two categories: the seller transfers a limited partnership interest in an existing partnership that continues its existence undisturbed by the transfer, or the seller transfers a portfolio of private equity investments in operating companies
Sellers of private equity investments sell both their investments in a fund and also their remaining unfunded commitments to the fund
Buyers of secondary interests include large pooled investment funds and institutional investors, including hedge funds
19 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Fund of FundsA private equity fund of funds consolidates
investments from many individual and institutional investors to make investments in a number of different private equity funds
This enables investors to access certain private equity fund managers that they otherwise may not be able to invest with, diversifies their private equity investment portfolio and augments their due diligence process in an effort to invest in high quality funds that have a high probability of achieving their investment objectives
Private equity fund of funds represent about 15% of committed capital in the private equity market
20 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Organizational StructureA private equity fund is usually structured as a limited
partnership that is owned jointly by a private equity firm (General Partner) and other investors such as pension funds, insurance companies, high net-worth individuals, family offices, endowments, foundations, fund of funds and sovereign wealth funds (all of which are Limited Partners)
The General Partner manages and controls the private equity fund
Private equity investments are channeled through a new company (NewCo) that receives equity investments from a private equity fund and management of the target company and debt financing from lenders and bond investors
The proceeds of the debt and equity capital received by NewCo are then used to acquire the target company
21 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Organizational Structure
General Partner(Private Equity Firm)
Limited Partners (Investors)Fund-of-funds, public and corporate pension funds, insurance companies,
endowments, foundations, high net-worth individuals, family offices, banks, sovereign wealth funds, etc.
Private Equity Fund(Limited Partnership)
NewCo(Investment)
NewCo(Investment)
NewCo(Investment)
NewCo(Investment)
Manages the fund
Ownership of a Private Equity Fund
22 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Limited Partners During the period of time that capital is invested, Limited
Partners have very limited influence on how the capital is spent as long as the fund adheres to the basic covenants of the fund agreement
Some of these covenants relate to restrictions on how much capital can be invested in any one company and the types of securities in which the fund can invest
In addition to management fees and carried interest, the General Partner sometimes receives deal and monitoring fees from portfolio companies in which the fund has invested
Some Limited Partners have objected to this arrangement and insist on applying deal and monitoring fees to reduce the management fees or splitting such fees 50/50 or 80/20 with the General Partner
Page 356
23 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Limited Partner Defaults When Limited Partners fail to make a scheduled payment, private
equity funds must consider how to cover the missed contributions, how to treat the Limited Partner and how and whether to replace the unfunded commitment
Most partnership agreements permit the defaulted amount to be called from other Limited Partners, but there are sometimes caps on the replacement amounts that can be called
Some agreements allow the partnership to borrow to cover the defaulted amount or to offset amounts distributable to cover the defaulted amount
In the event of a default, the General Partner generally has sole discretion regarding what measures to take
In theory, the General Partner may be able to convince a court to require a Limited Partner to honor its capital contribution obligations
However, General Partners have historically been reluctant to sue their investors based on the concern that this action would have a negative impact on future fund raising
24 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Organizational StructureNewCo Funding and Investing
Source: Training the Street, Inc.
• Target company shareholders sell shares (or assets of target) for casho Potential for some shareholders to “rollover” and participate in upside
• Cash paid by NewCo is funded by lenders and private equity fund (and management investments)o Cash flow from NewCo/Target Co. is used to service debt payments
Private Equity Fund and Management of Target
LendersTarget Co. Shareholders Assets
Equity
Debt
Equity of NewCo Cash
Cash
Cash
Stock
NewCo
25 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Taxes The organizational structure of the private equity fund is
developed with a view to maximizing incentive compensation for the General Partner (GP) and tax considerations are paramount
The GP earns compensation based on their management of the fund (management fees usually equal about 2% of the assets under management and carried interest is approximately 20% of the profits of the investment activity)
Carried interest has historically been considered for tax purposes as an allocation of a portion of the partnership’s profits, which allowed capital gains treatment (historically a 15% rate, rather than ordinary income treatment, which could be as high as 37%)
However, the Dodd Frank Act requires carried interest to be treated as ordinary income instead of capital gains, causing a significant reduction in GP net compensation
26 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Compensation Management Fee: Usually 2% of total capital commitments until the end
of a four to five-year investment horizon, and then 2% of unreturned funded capital thereafter (declining as investments are sold or realized)
Carried Interest: This is an incentive payment that will be paid (after a Preferred Return is obtained by Limited Partners) to create a80/20 split in profits between Limited Partners and General Partners (subject to a Clawback) A Clawback is a contractual provision applied at the liquidation and winding
up of a fund that adjusts distortions in compensation to General Partners based on the timing of gains and losses, obligating the General Partner to return a portion of prior distributions of carried interest for redistribution to Limited Partners
Page 353 Portfolio Company Fees and Expenses: Paid directly by portfolio
companies to the private equity firm based on the following fees and expenses
Additional Costs: In some cases, a number of additional costs can be imposed
27 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Preferred Returns Most compensation arrangements include preferred returns, which
must be paid to Limited Partners (after return of capital) before carried interest is paid to General Partners
There are two different ways to apply preferred returns: pure preferred returns and hurdle rates with catch-ups
A pure preferred returns approach provides that the carried interest percentage is applied only to profits in excess of a specified return
The effect of this is to reduce carried interest as a percentage of total profits
However, a hurtle rate with catch-up provision approach can eliminate this negative outcome for the General Partner if total investment returns are high
This approach usually provides that a carried interest percentage is applied after returns exceed a predetermined hurdle rate: an absolute rate, or the yield on a changeable rate such as one-year U.S. treasuries, LIBOR, or the S&P 500
28 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Hurtle Rates With Catch-UpsPreferred Returns Catch-Up Provision
• A General Partner catch-up provision can eliminate the negative consequences of a pure preferred return carve out for Limited Partners if investment returns are high enough. An example follows:
o For ease of reference, assume the following carried interest formula:
1) 100% of profits (after investor capital is returned) are allocated to Limited Partners until they have received a pure preferred return of 8%, after which
2) 100% of profits are allocated to the General Partner until the General Partner has received 20% of cumulative profits.
3) All remaining profits are allocated 80% to the Limited Partners and 20% to the General Partner (the General Partner also shares in the 80% profit allocations to the extent of its investment in the fund).
• In this example, if total profits equal or exceed a 10% return, the General Partner receives 20% of total profits and the interim allocations of the preferred return are ultimately without economic substance. At lower return levels, the outcome is different.
• Therefore, an important factor in evaluating a carried interest formula which has a preferred return is whether there is a General Partner catch-up. This is an area where there remains substantial variation.
• While the General Partner catch-up allocation is often 100%, it is not uncommon to see interim allocations of 80% to the General Partner and 20% to the Limited Partners.
Source: Schell, James M. Private Equity Funds: Business Structure and Operations. Law Journal Press, 1999, pp2-16.
29 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Closed End FundsMost private equity funds are “closed-end” funds,
meaning that Limited Partners commit to provide cash for investments in companies and pay for certain fees and expenses, but they cannot withdraw their funds until the fund is terminated
This compares with mutual funds where investors can withdraw their money any time
The General Partner in a private equity fund usually commits at least 1% of the total capital and the balance is committed by Limited Partners
These funds are normally invested over a four to five-year period and then there is a five to eight year period during which the fund will exit investments and return capital and profits to all partners
30 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
ExitsExit Characteristics of Leveraged Buyouts Across Time
Note: The table reports exit information for 17,171 worldwide leveraged buyout transactions that include every transaction with a financial sponsor in the Capital IQ database announced between 1/1/1970 and 6/30/2007. The numbers are expressed as a percentage of transactions, on an equally-weighted basis. Exit status is determined using various databases, including Capital IQ, SDC, Worldscope, Amadeus, Cao, and Lerner (2007), as well as company and LBO firm web sites.
Source: Kaplan, Steven N. and Per Strömberg. “Leveraged Buyouts and Private Equity.” Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 23, No. 1, Winter 2009, p129.
Year of original LBO1970-1984
1985-1989
1990-1994
1995-1999
2000-2002
2003-2005
2006-2007
Whole period
Type of exit:Bankruptcy 7% 6% 5% 8% 6% 3% 3% 6%IPO 28% 25% 23% 11% 9% 11% 1% 14%Sold to strategic buyer 31% 35% 38% 40% 37% 40% 35% 38%Secondary buyout 5% 13% 17% 23% 31% 31% 17% 24%Sold to LBO-backed firm 2% 3% 3% 5% 6% 7% 19% 5%Sold to management 1% 1% 1% 2% 2% 1% 1% 1%Other/unknown 26% 18% 12% 11% 10% 7% 24% 11%
No exit by Nov. 2007 3% 5% 9% 27% 43% 74% 98% 54%
% of deals exited within24 months (2 years) 14% 12% 14% 13% 9% 13% 12%60 months (5 years) 47% 40% 53% 41% 40% 42%72 months (6 years) 53% 48% 63% 49% 49% 51%84 months (7 years) 61% 58% 70% 56% 55% 58%120 months (10 years) 70% 75% 82% 73% 76%
31 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Regulations Historically, in the U.S., the SEC has generally not imposed
registration requirements on managers of private equity funds because most managers of private equity funds manage 14 or less funds, and therefore qualify for exemption from registration under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940
However, new regulation eliminates this exemption, requiring all managers of private equity funds with assets under management of greater than $30 million to register as investment advisers with the SEC
Although this regulation does not subject private equity funds to the same expansive regulation as mutual funds and other types of registered investment companies, private equity funds are subject to reporting, books and records, and anti-money laundering requirements
In addition, they must cooperate with SEC examination requests
32 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
RegulationsAlthough there are fewer regulations imposed in the U.S.
on private equity funds compared to mutual funds, private equity funds and fund managers must comply with a number of regulations under federal law, including the following:Annual Privacy NoticesSupplemental Filings Pursuant to the Investment Advisers
Act of 1940Filings Pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934ERISA-Related FilingPrivate Placement LimitationsAnti-Fraud RuleInvestment Advisors Act of 1940Investment Company Act of 1940
33 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
FASB 157 Historically, private equity funds valued assets at cost or used the latest
round of financing as the basis for determining fair value However, in November 2008, FASB 157 changed the method for deriving
fair value and the amount of disclosure regarding how fair value is determined
During 2008 and 2009, Limited Partners received valuation disclosures for some portfolio companies that showed dramatically lower values than were previously disclosed because of contraction in earnings and multiples
For example, for a hypothetical buyout in 2007, a company’s EBITDA may have been $100 million and a private equity fund may have purchased the company at an enterprise value/EBITDA multiple of 10x, funding the purchase with 60% debt ($600 million) and 40% equity ($400 million)
If, during 2008, the company’s EBITDA dropped to $66.7 million and comparable companies multiples dropped to 9x, the portfolio company’s equity would be wiped out, assuming an unchanged debt amount of $600 million (9 x $66.7 = $600 million, which equals the debt obligation, leaving no equity value)
34 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Secondary Market A private equity secondary market enables Limited
Partners and new investors to buy and sell private equity investments or remaining unfunded commitments to funds
35 L7: Private Equity: Ch16&19
Private Equity Secondary Market
Note 1: The most basic secondary transaction involves an investor selling its limited partnership interest in a fund. In some instances, however, a portfolio of direct company interests may be be sold instead.
Secondary Buyer
SellingLimited Partner
Negotiated purchase price ($)
Transfer of Limited Partnership interest in private equity fund, or interest in
portfolio company(s)1
GP approval for transfer required
General Partner
Unfunded obligations also assumed