Tag Archives: Private Equity

A 'New Normal' for Private Equity

By Knowledge@Wharton on Forbes, Contributor The following post was published on the Knowledge@Wharton Today blog on July 11, 2013. Some $200 billion of new capital went to private equity and venture capital management partnerships (collectively referred to here as PE) throughout the world in 2012. For the first time, 20% of that total, some $40 billion, went to fund managers in emerging market countries. Surprisingly, of that $40 billion, only $15 billion went to the subset of emerging economies known as the BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India and China). That leaves $25 billion that went into the non-BRIC emerging markets. So where did the rest of it go? Countries like Columbia, Chile, Peru and Mexico have seen remarkable growth. Several African countries, such as South Africa, Kenya and Nigeria — indeed, the whole of sub-Saharan Africa — have witnessed growth in the number of fund managers and the capital under management. Turkey also has emerged as a destination, as have Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and now Indonesia. These new players still have work to do in improving their PE ecosystems. Management capacity building is high on the list, as are appropriate laws and regulations, tax treatment and acceptance of contractual provisions. These countries’ governments have recognized the role of PE in their industries and are motivated to make the needed changes. There is a discernible transfer of knowledge from mature economies to the emerged and emerging market PE players. These trends are reflected in two of the articles included in this year’s Wharton Private Equity Review. One offers coverage of a panel discussion titled, “Private Equity Survival Guide: How to Survive and Thrive in Emerging Markets,” which took place at the 2013 Wharton Private Equity & Venture Capital Conference. The second, written by a team of five Wharton MBA students, focuses on the impact of the Arab Spring on private equity in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. Beyond emerging markets, this year’s review includes a piece by a Wharton MBA student that looks at how the regulatory scrutiny of the PE industry in the United States has evolved dramatically over recent years. The industry has moved from a lightly regulated, self-governing asset class to one that is coming under increasing scrutiny and reporting requirements. The author speculates on what is in store for the industry as regulators continue their investigations. An example of international activity is presented in a case study by another Wharton MBA student, titled “Investing in Times of Distress: the Bank of Ireland and WL Ross,” which provides a detailed overview of how PE investors have played a role in the recapitalization and restructuring of troubled financial institutions. Knowledge@Wharton then reports on another panel from the conference that addressed how PE firms create value and questioned some of the common wisdom surrounding the roles and actions of PE firms once they have acquired a company. Finally, a piece on venture capital from another conference panel then looks at the challenge of generating consistent returns and the growing allure of New York …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

What Happens To A Company's Leadership Team When A New CEO Is Hired?

By Quora, Contributor

Answer by Bruce Weitz, Former CEO of Kings Supermarkets, Duane Reade Drugstores, Grossman’s Home Centers, Today’s Man Menswear Superstores, and First National Supermarkets and currently an Advisory Board Member and portfolio company Board member to multiple Private Equity firms, …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Private Equity: Heading For The Exits?

By Bain Insights, Contributor

Exit activity has sputtered over the past three years, and PE funds are feeling the heat to sell aging portfolio holdings and return capital to their limited partners. But as we explain in Bain & Company’s Global Private Equity Report 2013, they may soon get that opportunity amid unmistakable signs that exit opportunities finally appear to be moving into higher gear. M&A is poised to accelerate, bringing critical strategic buyers of PE-owned companies back into the markets. Sponsor-to-sponsor transactions should continue strong in all major PE markets. And strengthening public equity markets have rebounded to pre-downturn valuations, a crucial precondition for the possible long-awaited sale of the mega buyouts through IPOs.

From: http://www.forbes.com/sites/baininsights/2013/04/18/private-equity-heading-for-the-exits/

SEC Filing: Schulze Bid Hopes Fading Away

By 24/7 Wall St.

BestBuy storefront OK

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Richard Schulze has filed a statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission that basically confirms that he is not going to make a new big for shares of Best Buy Co. (NYSE: BBY). The filing says that the company’s new plan deserves a chance and that the company should be able to implement its plan. Thursday marked the end of a bid review period and that time has come and gone.

Best Buy shares are up 1.5% at $16.66 against a 52-week range of $11.20 to $27.95. The long and short is that Best Buy is going to likely have to fend for itself. Schulze’s filing shows that no determination has been made, which to us is the telegraph that he was not able to pony up the adequate financial backing from the private equity firms to do a deal. Best Buy‘s market cap is over $5.6 billion, but there are too many shareholders who are buried in “long and wrong” trades from prices even much higher than what have been seen in the last year.

The full amended 13D filing SEC Filing says,

Over the course of the past several months, Mr. Schulze facilitated various offers that would have resulted in the investment of new equity into the Company by up to three leading private equity firms. In connection with such investments, it was contemplated that each private equity firm would be provided a board seat and that Mr. Schulze would nominate two directors to the Company’s board of directors. In addition to their capital, Mr. Schulze believed that the private equity firms would add significant expertise, talent and experience to the Company’s board of directors, which would assist the Company in returning to its position of market leadership.

In the end, the Company determined not to accept the terms offered by the private equity investors for their investment. Mr. Schulze believes, however, that the Company deserves a chance to implement its own plan. No one is more interested in the success of the Company than Mr. Schulze.

Mr. Schulze has not made any determination as to whether or not he will exercise his right to appoint his own two nominees to the Company’s board of directors.

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Consumer Electronics, Corporate Governance, Mergers & Acquisitions, Mergers and Buy Outs, Private Equity, Retail Tagged: BBY

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Private Equity, Hedge Funds Must be Understood to be Regulated Effectively

By Timothy Spangler, Contributor In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, much ill-feeling remains towards Wall Street, the investment banks and those individuals who profit from short-term movements in the financial markets. As the crisis has dragged on, more questions are being raised about how the modern financial system actually works. Identifying “who does what” when it comes to complex derivative securities or the take-over of well-established, brand name companies by faceless financiers seems much more difficult today than a generation ago. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Dell Likely To Be Cut To Junk-Bond Credit Rating After Buyout

By 24/7 Wall St.

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Stock Split ImageDell Inc. (NASDAQ: DELL) is trading up only about 1% now that its formal buyout has surfaced. Now that Michael Dell is using private equity as an investor and using finance from the outside and repatriating cash from overseas, not everyone is positive on this deal.

We warned about shareholder suits or investigations announced by law firms because this was going to lock in forced long-term losses for many shareholders. Now we have some new concerns brought up by Standard & Poor’s on Dell’s corporate credit rating.

S&P placed Dell’s “A-” rated corporate credit rating and its “A-1″ commercial paper ratings on CreditWatch with negative implications. In short, S&P is considering a downgrade of the corporate credit. This comes on the heels of seeing some Dow Jones news this morning showing that credit spreads widened out on Dell’s longer-term corporate bonds. That report noted that prior debt holders may be subordinate to the new debt for this MBO financing.

Michael Dell may be getting to do this deal solely because interest rates are so low. Otherwise the borrowing costs are likely to be higher down the road. The problem is that S&P said that it expects to lower its ratings on Dell out of investment grade after reviewing the proposed capital structure, corporate financial policy, and strategic direction under the new ownership structure.

As this new borrowing will leverage Dell’s good balance with a lot of new debt, S&P warned that the new credit rating is likely to be no more than “BB” and perhaps in the “B” range. In short, Dell’s existing debt will likely be junk-rated debt. This sounds bad on the surface and in no way is it really good. The caveat we would bring up is that this would not be anywhere close to the first instance that this has come about where good credit is cut to junk-rating. That was very common back in the private equity boom from 2005 to 2008 when companies were acquired almost weekly with leveraged finance by private equity shops which hoped to flip the companies back on to the capital markets or to a higher bidder down the road.

Michael Dell‘s press release this morning indicated that the deal is not subject to any financing. For his sake he better hope that doesn’t magically change.

Dell shares are up 1.2% at $13.43 against a 52-week trading range of $8.69 to $18.36.

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Analyst Calls, Bonds, Mergers & Acquisitions, Mergers and Buy Outs, PC Companies, Private Equity, Technology, Technology Companies Tagged: DELL

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Dell Buyout Finally Arrives: Takeunder M&A for Many Holders

By 24/7 Wall St.

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Dell HQDell Inc. (NASDAQ: DELL) has finally announced that it has signed a definitive merger agreement under which founding CEO Michael Dell will acquire the company in partnership with global technology investment firm Silver Lake Partners. Dell stockholders will receive $13.65 in cash per share of Dell. The total transaction is being valued at approximately $24.4 billion.

Investors will be happy if they bought shares during the weakest part of the past few months. Other than that, this management buyout is effectively a “takeunder” rather than a takeover for many Dell shareholders. Dell does maintain that this represents a premium of 25% over Dell’s closing share price of $10.88 on January 11, 2013, as the last trading day before rumors of a possible going-private transaction were first published. It is also listed as a premium of about 35% over Dell’s enterprise value on the same date. As far as the premium for the longer near-term, this represents a 37% premium over the average closing share price during the previous 90 calendar days prior to January 11, 2013.

The Dell board of directors unanimously approved a merger agreement under which Michael Dell and Silver Lake Partners will acquire Dell and take the company private, subject to a number of conditions. A vote of the unaffiliated stockholders is one condition. Dell’s merger agreement provides for a so-called 45-day “go-shop” period, allowing the Special Committee, along with Evercore Partners, to “actively solicit, receive, evaluate and potentially enter into negotiations with parties that offer alternative proposals.”

The transaction is amazingly not subject to financing conditions. The financing will come through a combination of cash and equity contributed by Mr. Dell’s 14% stake as of now, cash funded by investment funds affiliated with Silver Lake Partners, cash invested by MSD Capital, a $2 billion loan from Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT), rollover of existing debt, as well as debt financing that has been committed by BofA Merrill Lynch, Barclays, Credit Suisse and RBC Capital Markets, and cash on hand.

A successful competing bidder who makes a qualifying proposal during the initial go-shop period would bear a $180 million (less than 1%) termination fee. For a competing bidder who did not qualify during the initial go-shop period, the termination fee would be $450 million.

This deal has been in the works for about three weeks now, and it really started last year, if you read into the press release. Dell shares are up less than 1% at $13.39 on the deal and its 52-week trading range is $8.69 to $18.36.

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Active Trader, Consumer Electronics, Mergers & Acquisitions, Mergers and Buy Outs, PC Companies, Private Equity, Technology, Technology Companies Tagged: DELL, MSFT

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance