It is a $1 trillion game: Use It or Lose It.
The private equity
world is sitting on that 13-figure sum. It’s what the industry calls
dry powder. If they don’t spend their cash pile snapping up acquisitions
soon, they may have to return it to their investors.
Nearly $200 billion from funds raised in 2007 and 2008 alone needs to be spent in the next 12 months or it must be given back.
Private equity executives, after spending the last several years
largely on the sidelines amid the economic uncertainty — often
proclaiming “patience” as an explanation — have begun to be anxious that
they may need to go on a shopping spree. At least two major private
equity firms, according to two executives involved in the discussions,
have held internal strategy sessions in recent weeks about how to
approach the looming deadline.
Some private equity firms have put
the word out to Wall Street banks that they want to go “elephant
hunting” — seeking big deals worth as much as $10 billion — and are
willing to pay a special bounty for bringing them acquisition targets.
At
least one firm has gone so far as to begin contemplating asking its
investors, which include the nation’s largest pension funds, to extend
the deadline for the money to be spent in return for certain concessions
on fees. (Of course, they don’t return the fees that have been
collected thus far).
“The clock is ticking loudly for these
funds,” Hugh MacArthur, the head of Bain & Company’s private equity
practice, wrote as the lead author of a report on the state of the
industry.
So the race is on.
But, of course, there is a
problem: “Burning off the aging dry powder will likely result in too
much capital chasing too few deals throughout 2012,” according to Mr.
MacArthur.
That means it is possible we could see a series of bad deals with even worse returns.
Already,
private equity firms have been quietly spending lots of cash. In the
third quarter alone, private equity firms in the United States burned
through $45 billion, up from $17.1 billion in the previous quarter,
according to Capital IQ, which tracks deals data. Carlyle Group,
which had its initial public offering in May, has been the busiest firm
this year: it has done 11 deals worth almost $12 billion.
Acquisition
prices are also likely to balloon because of “lots of firms bidding for
the same obvious deals,” Alastair Gibbons, a senior partner at
Bridgepoint Capital, told Triago, a fund-raising services firm that
publishes a widely read quarterly newsletter. “Since there is near
record dry powder globally, it’s entirely plausible that we’ll see
increasingly overcrowded bidding processes.”
Richard Peterson, an
analyst for S&P Capital IQ’s Global Markets Intelligence group, said
that private equity firms are already paying multiples of Ebitda —
earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization — of 10.6
this year, up from 10.3 last year. It’s worth remembering that many of
the most successful deals in the private equity industry were bought for
six to eight times Ebitda, he said.
He noted, however, that since
firms were able to borrow at unheard-of low rates today “it may give
them more confidence to pay a little bit more.”
Perhaps in a sign
of desperation, many private equity firms have been increasingly engaged
in a game of “hot potato” with one firm selling a business to another —
known as a secondary deal. Mr. Peterson said that at the current pace,
the industry was expected to spend a record-breaking $22.3 billion this
year simply buying companies from each other rather than buying
businesses from the public markets or from private owners outside the
private equity industry.
Mr. Peterson also raised a question that
is often being whispered about but rarely said aloud: “A lot of these
firms are publicly traded now. So to what degree are the transactions
being driven by earnings objectives?”
Many of the big private equity firms — Apollo Group, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, Blackstone Group
and Carlyle Group, among them — are public. And for the first time, it
is possible that the interests of the public shareholders could diverge
from the interests of the investors in the buyout funds, at least in the
short term.
If the private equity firms don’t spend the money
that they have already raised, it is unlikely they will be able to raise
even more in coming years. And increasingly, the private equity firms
have become dependent on the management fees not just to keep the lights
on but to expand their businesses into other areas, in part to
diversify, which has been part of the pitch to public investors. The
biggest firms have become asset gatherers.
“In a nutshell, 95
percent of funds would be affected and see a big drop in fee income
based on not investing all of the committed capital,” according to Tim
Friedman, director of North America for Preqin, which tracks private
equity fund-raising and deals. He said that he did not expect firms to
do deals simply “for the sake of it,” but he also cautioned that the
firms were “under a lot of pressure.”
So keep an eye out for megadeal headlines — and whether they command the same prices when the companies are sold.
Source: http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/10/01/more-money-than-they-know-what-to-do-with/
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