Thanks to visit codestin.com
Credit goes to www.scribd.com

100% found this document useful (2 votes)
576 views5 pages

What Is Private Equity

A new high-water mark was reached in 2006, as $215 billion was raised for private equity investment in the United States. Private equity provides a way for investors to have tight control over a company's strategy, management, and financial decisions. If you work for a small business that's received private equity funding or a startup backed by venture capital, private equity investors play a significant role in your company's board of directors.

Uploaded by

rayna6633
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (2 votes)
576 views5 pages

What Is Private Equity

A new high-water mark was reached in 2006, as $215 billion was raised for private equity investment in the United States. Private equity provides a way for investors to have tight control over a company's strategy, management, and financial decisions. If you work for a small business that's received private equity funding or a startup backed by venture capital, private equity investors play a significant role in your company's board of directors.

Uploaded by

rayna6633
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 5

What Is Private Equity?

By Sue Troy
published on BNET.com 3/05/2007

The term "private equity" encompasses a range of techniques used to finance commercial ventures in
ways that do not involve the use of publicly tradable assets such as corporate stock or bonds. Typical
forms of private equity include venture capital, growth and mezzanine capital, angel investing, and
private equity funds. Private equity investors seek to obtain a substantial interest in a company in
order to gain control over the firm's management. Their goal is to boost the value of a company, sell
off their investment, and walk away with substantially more money than they put in.

Key Stats
• Private equity firms in the U.S.: 1,546 (June 2006).

• Private equity capital under management: $811 billion (June 2006)

• Value of private equity buyouts: $660 billion (2006)

• Largest private equity deal in 2006: HCA (Hospital Corporation of America), bought out by KKR, Bain
Capital, and Merrill Lynch Global Private Equity, $33 billion

Why It Matters Now:


The amount of money flowing through private equity funds is on the rise. A new high-water mark
was reached in 2006, as $215 billion was raised for private equity investment in the United States,
topping the prior record of $178 billion in 2000. According to Private Equity Council, a consortium
of investment firms, there's nearly $700 billion awaiting investment now; analysts expect to see
an increase in corporate buyouts in 2007 as a result. Private equity is gaining popularity because
it provides a way for investors to have tight control over a company's strategy, management, and
financial decisions—without the quarterly scrutiny, public disclosure requirements, and regulatory
oversight faced by publicly traded firms.

Why It Matters to You


Private equity investors tend to be either institutions or very wealthy individuals, so the average
worker might not directly experience the ways in which private equity is having an impact upon
corporate strategy and governance. Nevertheless, private equity can have a significant impact on how
your company is run or the way it positions itself to compete in the current business environment.

On the modest end, if you work for a small business that's received private equity funding or a
startup backed by venture capital, it's very likely that private equity investors play a significant role
in your company's board of directors. On a day-to-day basis, that means you're likely to see higher

-1-
expectations for sales targets and new business goals. If senior management can't meet those
objectives, expect to see new faces in the office soon.

Among larger companies, private investment is responsible for an increasing chunk of mergers and
acquisitions—a process that can be extremely disruptive to employees. In 2006, the biggest M&As
were in the real estate and healthcare industries.

If you work for a company financed by private equity, be aware of the investors' timeframe for cashing
out. When an investment group decides to sell a business, the investors may demand layoffs or other
cutbacks to improve the balance sheet and make the company more attractive to suitors. On the
other hand, they might also offer retention bonuses to keep valued employees.

The Strong Points


Private equity firms specialize in increasing the value of their holdings by reinvigorating the
management of a company. This can mean strengthening leadership, refocusing strategy, reducing
cost structures, instituting growth initiatives, or even breaking up the company to sell it in parts. When
it works as intended, the result is more efficient use of capital, which in turn fuels the economy and
drives innovation.

The recent experience of the Warner Music Group provides a good example of how private equity
works. In early 2004, a group of private investors purchased the music label from Time Warner for
$2.6 billion. Operational cuts were made, the company went public in May 2005, and in early 2007 it
had a market cap of more than $3 billion—providing the private equity investors with a healthy return
on their investment.

The Weak Spots


Critics charge that private equity investors seek to boost the value of a company as quickly possible,
with little regard for intangible factors such as company history, culture, or workplace environment. In
other words, while private equity is great for investors, it may not be so much fun for the companies
they invest in or the people who work for them.

Consider the 2000 buyout of KB Toys by Bain Capital. As part of the financing agreement, KB was
required to pay Bain a $121 million special dividend to guarantee its profits. KB couldn't service
the debt and went into Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2004. Creditors including Big Lots and
Hasbro sued KB management and Bain, alleging that they seized cash to line their own pockets. Bain
claimed the company was struggling because of competition from Wal-Mart. When the lawsuit was
settled, KB's creditors received pennies on the dollar to repay outstanding debts.

How to Talk About It


Here are some key terms used among private equity investors—and those seeking investment from
them:

-2-
Angel investor: A one-on-one or informal type of private-equity investment. Angel investors are often
wealthy friends or relatives, although angel investing networks also exist: "If we can get $100,000
from each of five angel investors, we'll probably be able to keep development efforts afloat for about a
year."

"A" round: An initial round of funding in which venture capitalists put up money for a company
formerly backed by founders or angel investors: "The company raised $6 million in 'A' round
financing."

Dutch auction: A term applied to an initial public offering (IPO) in which the highest bidder gets the
opportunity to buy shares first. If any shares are left, the next highest bidder gets those shares, and
so on. Google's IPO was the most famous Dutch auction offering to date.

Exit strategy: The name of the game in private equity; the approach a private equity firm uses to
convert its ownership share of a company into cold, hard cash: "The IPO market has been sluggish,
so an acquisition by one of the industry's leading players may be our best exit strategy."

LBO (leveraged buyout): When an investor gains majority control of a company through the use of
debt (usually in the form of borrowed money or bonds). Can be risky if a firm's cash flow is uneven, as
this could hinder the company's ability to service its debt.

Mezzanine capital: A form of private financing that carries a higher credit risk because it is
exchanged for equity that is not secured by collateral or assets in the event of bankruptcy or default:
"Mezzanine capital might make sense if we need to bridge the funding gap until we launch our IPO."

Venture capital: A private equity fund that specializes in early-stage or startup companies. VC's
typically have a higher tolerance for risk than other private equity investors.

Key Players
Private equity firms have become a haven for former CEOs and big-name politicians. For example,
former U.S. president George H.W. Bush was an advisor to the Carlyle Group from 1998 to 2003, and
today Carlyle is chaired by former IBM CEO Louis V. Gerstner, Jr.

Top Five Private Equity Firms:

Rank Firm Name Fund Size Focus


($ million)

1 Blackstone Group, L.P. 41362.6 Real estate,


consumer/industrial,
communications

2 The Carlyle Group 35808.8 Telecom/media,


real estate,
auto/transportation,

-3-
consumer, energy,
technology and
business services

3 Goldman, Sachs & Co. 31967.4 Varied

4 Texas Pacific Group 26178 Communications,


industrial, technology,
health care

5 Warburg Pincus, LLC 23010 Financial, health


care, IT, energy,
consumer/industrial,
communications, and
real estate

As of Sept. 30, 2006; Financial data from Thomson Financial

Top Five Venture Capital Firms:

Rank Firm Name Fund Size Focus


($ million)

1 Warburg Pincus, LLC 8,470.00 Financial, health


care, IT, energy,
consumer/industrial,
communications, and
real estate

2 New Enterprise 7,791.50 IT, medical, life


Associates science

3 Oak Investment 7,590.00 IT, health care, retail


Partners

4 Technology Crossover 4,615.90 Technology


Ventures (TCV)

5 Sequoia Capital 4,018.40 Technology

As of Sept. 30, 2006; Financial data from Thomson Financial and National Venture Capital
Association

-4-
Further Reading
• Newsletter: The Journal of Private Equity (Requires subscription.)
• Newsletter: PEWeek, a Thomson Financial-owned site focused on venture-capital news (Requires
subscription.)
• Book: "Angel Investing: Matching Startup Funds with Startup Companies—A Guide for
Entrepreneurs, Individual Investors, and Venture Capitalists" by Mark Van Osnabrugge and
Robert J. Robinson
• Book: "Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco" by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar
• Book: "Rich Dad's Advisors: How to Attract Other People's Money for Your Investments—The
Ultimate Leverage" by Michael A. Lechter
• Blog: Paul Kedrosky's Infectious Greed
• Blog: VentureBeat
• Blog: Going Private; the Sardonic Memoirs of a Private Equity Professional

Copyright © 2007 CNET Networks, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

-5-

You might also like