本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Our friends at sister Dow Jones publication Private Equity Analyst asked a number of people in the private-equity industry what they make of the debt crisis and its likely effect on the business. Here’s a sampling of those responses:
Buyout
Robert S. Morris, managing partner, Olympus Partners
If the current drama does not end with there being only one U.S. bank, one U.S. auto manufacturer and one U.S. insurance company, each of which report to government-appointed Soviets to make operating decisions, then buyout opportunities will continue to appear. Private ownership continues to demonstrate itself to be the superior method for nursing the future of companies while looking after shareholder interests. The outside board of luminaries that advised A Man in Fuld at Lehman, the Merrill Lynch team and the team at AIG failed to serve as the voice of reason as leverage reached 33 to 1, a level at which no buyout deal nor home mortgage could ever come into being. The S&L collapse of the 1980s, the Drexel Burnham bankruptcy, the HLT [highly leveraged transaction] restrictions, the bursting of the Internet bubble all created excellent investment opportunities for patient capital managers willing to spend the time required to clean up problem assets. The sizeable gains following these periods were largely due to buying right, improving earnings and selling at expanded multiples, not due to large dollops of leverage. Certainly the reaction to recent events will be a careful extension of credit, but on a risk-adjusted basis the near term will be the best period for lenders since the HLT period of 1990-91. Sponsor “selection” by lenders will become an important near-term lending criteria. For the long term we are doomed to forget the lessons of history and repeat the excesses of the recent fiasco again.
Limited Partners
Mike Powell, head of alternatives, Universities Superannuation Scheme
We are witnessing unprecedented dislocation in financial markets, from which private equity cannot be expected to be immune. However, private equity can be an important stabilizing factor in markets starved of capital. Its access to patient capital’ from its investors enables the industry to take a longer-term view than most other market participants. I continue to expect late 2008/2009 vintage transactions to generate some of the best returns of all private equity vintages. Longer term, there is no doubt that the financial crisis will leave some scars and the private equity industry will look different than it does today. The age of leverage has come to an end and we are unlikely to see its like again. I expect to see smaller fund sizes, longer investment and holding periods and a focus on adding value through operational improvement, rather than financial engineering. GPs may end up actually having to spend their management fees to run their businesses.
Debt Providers
Gregg Smith, senior managing director and group head of investment-banking services, CIT Group
In the short term, firms that do get deals done are those with flexibility in their LP agreements that allows them to use more equity. The impact on middle-market lending is reflected in the overall availability of senior debt, volume of covenants and the cost of debt. On average, lending to the middle market will become more expensive by at least 100 basis points. In the long term, private equity will become a more traditional asset class and go back to its knitting, which is to buy companies when they are down and out, get them back in shape and sell them at higher prices.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
Buyout
Robert S. Morris, managing partner, Olympus Partners
If the current drama does not end with there being only one U.S. bank, one U.S. auto manufacturer and one U.S. insurance company, each of which report to government-appointed Soviets to make operating decisions, then buyout opportunities will continue to appear. Private ownership continues to demonstrate itself to be the superior method for nursing the future of companies while looking after shareholder interests. The outside board of luminaries that advised A Man in Fuld at Lehman, the Merrill Lynch team and the team at AIG failed to serve as the voice of reason as leverage reached 33 to 1, a level at which no buyout deal nor home mortgage could ever come into being. The S&L collapse of the 1980s, the Drexel Burnham bankruptcy, the HLT [highly leveraged transaction] restrictions, the bursting of the Internet bubble all created excellent investment opportunities for patient capital managers willing to spend the time required to clean up problem assets. The sizeable gains following these periods were largely due to buying right, improving earnings and selling at expanded multiples, not due to large dollops of leverage. Certainly the reaction to recent events will be a careful extension of credit, but on a risk-adjusted basis the near term will be the best period for lenders since the HLT period of 1990-91. Sponsor “selection” by lenders will become an important near-term lending criteria. For the long term we are doomed to forget the lessons of history and repeat the excesses of the recent fiasco again.
Limited Partners
Mike Powell, head of alternatives, Universities Superannuation Scheme
We are witnessing unprecedented dislocation in financial markets, from which private equity cannot be expected to be immune. However, private equity can be an important stabilizing factor in markets starved of capital. Its access to patient capital’ from its investors enables the industry to take a longer-term view than most other market participants. I continue to expect late 2008/2009 vintage transactions to generate some of the best returns of all private equity vintages. Longer term, there is no doubt that the financial crisis will leave some scars and the private equity industry will look different than it does today. The age of leverage has come to an end and we are unlikely to see its like again. I expect to see smaller fund sizes, longer investment and holding periods and a focus on adding value through operational improvement, rather than financial engineering. GPs may end up actually having to spend their management fees to run their businesses.
Debt Providers
Gregg Smith, senior managing director and group head of investment-banking services, CIT Group
In the short term, firms that do get deals done are those with flexibility in their LP agreements that allows them to use more equity. The impact on middle-market lending is reflected in the overall availability of senior debt, volume of covenants and the cost of debt. On average, lending to the middle market will become more expensive by at least 100 basis points. In the long term, private equity will become a more traditional asset class and go back to its knitting, which is to buy companies when they are down and out, get them back in shape and sell them at higher prices.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net