Lecture 16: Overview of Private Equity: FNCE 751
Lecture 16: Overview of Private Equity: FNCE 751
L EC T U R E 1 6 : O VERVIEW O F PR IVAT E EQ U IT Y
Acknowledgements
Materials in this presentation are kindly provided by Edward J. Mathias of
Carlyle, Vinay Nair of Ada investments, Mehmet Budak, WG95, Bruce I. Ettelson of Kirkland & Ellis LLP and Bain and Company
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1. Introduction
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Investment is made through a negotiated process By sophisticated investors with financial and operating expertise The goal is to acquire undervalued or promising assets and realize
profits in 3-5 years after the acquisition
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What is an LBO?
Acquisition of a company where a PE firm uses cash equity and debt to
fund the purchase price
PE firm injects equity into a new shell company which borrows debt and
simultaneously acquires the target
Management ownership increases, creating higher incentives to improve Debt is repaid by the operating cash flows or by the sale of non-core
assets of the acquired business pay down the mortgage debt
LBO is similar to buying and renting out a house - the rent cash flows to
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LBO Fund
An LBO Fund is a pool of raised capital committed by investors to be
invested over the course of a number of years
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Partnerships have 10-year life with +1+1 extension 4-6 year investment period 1-2% annual management fee Profits split 80-20, after reaching hurdle return level for LPs LPs need to fund within 2-3 weeks of capital call Penalties for failure to fund by LPs IRRs depend on when money is transferred by LPs
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PE Principals
Members
GP $10M
Management Company
General Partner
20% Carried Interest Share in 80% of profits proportionate to GPs 1% capital contribution
LPs
2% Management Fee GP $10M U.S. Individuals U.S. Corporations TEOs Non-U.S. Persons
PE Fund $1 billion
LPs $990M
Portfolio Company #1
Portfolio Company #2
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Obtaining access to high quality deal flow Sorting and evaluating large amount of information Designing transactions Providing strategic, operational and financial assistance to portfolio companies IPO, Sale or Recapitalization
Structuring investments
o
Monitoring investments
o
Exiting investments
o
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Sources of Funds
Equity
o o o o
New equity injection from LBO sponsor Potential equity contribution from existing management Potential continuing equity investment by existing shareholders (rollover) Equity from a strategic partner Bank debt (senior debt) High yield debt (subordinated debt) Can be structured to be more debt-like or more equity-like depending on the situation
Debt
o o
Mezzanine securities
o
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Bank Debt
Senior secured (most senior debt) Matures before other debt classes, amortizing Typically callable/prepayable at par Quarterly interest payments Do not need public disclosures Structured at the operating company level Underwritten via syndication Diligence, commitment, launch, syndicate, fund
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Usually subordinated and/or unsecured Interest rate is fixed, maturity of 8-10 years Greater leverage capacity Bullet maturity after full bank debt amortization Usually not callable at par in early years, typically 1-5 years Structured at the operating company level Publicly quoted security Public filing requirements Diligence, document, road-show, price and fund
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Mezzanine Debt
Subordinated to bank debt and high yield bonds Flexible, typically floating interest rate Non-amortizing, bullet maturity typically after 10 years Cash & PIK coupon payment further enhanced with equity warrants PIK component can eat into equity Often structured at the holding company level
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1500
300
Explore all aspects of commercial due diligence Develop detailed financial case Highlight and research strengths/weaknesses Assess competitive edge in the process and/or postdeal and identify Partner(s)
50 1308 20
5-10
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$100MM 5x
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Financing
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Transaction Overview
Total Sources Of Cash $100mm
New Banks Loans New Senior Debt= $50MM New Mezzanine= $20MM New Equity= $ 30 MM Expenses= $5MM
Repayment
Old Banks
Mezzanine Fund
Purchase Of Stock
Shareholders
Payments
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Adding Value
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Returns
Five Year CAGR 8.4 %
New Senior Debt= $50MM New Mezzanine= $20MM New Equity= $30MM
Equity= $110MM
22 %
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3. Value Creation
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THE MODEL
FINANCIAL OPERATIONAL MULTIPLES INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS
SOURCE
Underlevered
Undervalued
STRUCTURE
Leverage
Price
DELIVER
Passive
EXIT
IPO/Sale/Recap
IPO/Sale/Recap
IPO/Sale
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FINANCIAL
INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS
SOURCE
Underlevered
STRUCTURE
Leverage
DELIVER
I-banks Informal networks Local Intermediaries Private Banks Mezz. Funds High Yield Hedge Funds Covenants Disclosure Legal Framework Recap-Banks Sale-M&As IPO-Active Equity Markets
EXIT
IPO/Sale/Recap
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OPERATIONAL
INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS
SOURCE
STRUCTURE
Control Growth Equity more passive Executive Talent Industry/Regional expertise Monitor/Advise
I-banks Informal networks Local Intermediaries Trust Bankruptcy Laws Labor Market Disclosure
DELIVER
EXIT
IPO/Sale/Recap
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MULTIPLES
INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS
SOURCE
Undervalued
STRUCTURE
Price
DELIVER
Passive
I-banks Informal networks Local Intermediaries Institutional Trading Bidding Competition Disclosure
EXIT
IPO/Sale
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5. Trends
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Asia-Pacific: Down
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Exits: Sponsor-to-Sponsor up
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GP Expectations
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Size of Deal
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Capital Raised
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Sources of Capital
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Performance of PE Funds
Kaplan & Schoar
Large heterogeneity across funds LBO fund returns net of fees are lower than S&P500 on an equal
weighted basis, but higher on a value weighted basis.
GPs returns are persistent. Fund flows are positively related to past performance
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Performance of PE Funds
Metrick and Yasuda
Two thirds of expected revenue comes from fixed revenue components. There is striking difference between buyout funds and venture capital
funds o Update: Venture capital continues to underperform
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Performance of PE Funds
Phalippou and Gottschalg Average net of fees fund performance of 3% below that of S&P500 Once adjusted for risk, i.e., leverage, underperformance is 6%. Standard aggregation choices bias performance estimates upward. Commonly used dataset for private equity performance contains funds
that performs better than average
Fee bill is more than 25% of the value invested (6% per year) and two
thirds of the fees come from management fees.
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Performance of PE Funds
Moving from 2% to 2.5% management fee translates into a 1.3%
decrease in alpha and that reducing the fee to 1% is only worth 0.6% in terms of alpha.
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