Private equity turns to new fundraising tactics in tough market - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
财富管理

Private equity turns to new fundraising tactics in tough market

Firms are hoping to attract investors to single deal offerings with cheaper fees

Private equity firms are increasingly raising money to buy individual companies on a deal-by-deal basis, as they struggle with a downturn in the market and investors look for ways to cut management fees.

A record $31bn was deployed by “deal-by-deal” investors last year, according to data provided by private equity advisory firm Triago, defying a broader dealmaking and fundraising slump in the industry.

This was more than five times the amount raised and invested in 2019. More than 700 companies were acquired by private equity in this type of deal last year, more than double the total from five years ago.

Among those offering or considering these types of deals are some of finance’s biggest names, including hedge fund Elliott, US investment giant Hamilton Lane, as well as others such as European credit firm Hayfin, said people familiar with the details.

“Barely a conversation goes by with investors who aren’t looking at, or are open to, doing deal-by-deal type investments,” said William Clegg, a partner at private equity advisory firm Colmar Capital. “It’s everyone from insurance companies, [to] sophisticated family offices and even sovereign wealth funds.”

Traditionally, private equity firms raise money from investors in a structure that locks in cash for more than a decade. This is used to buy a portfolio of companies. The firms charge management fees of between 1.5 and 2 per cent and take 20 per cent of the profits when portfolio investments are sold on. The structure means private equity executives can make good money on fees even if they have not invested their clients’ money.

However, after a decade-long industry boom, private equity groups have been struggling to sell portfolio investments and to convince investors to lock funds up for long periods with high fees attached. Including venture capital, the industry raised $803bn last year, the lowest amount since 2017.

Dealmakers have also found it hard to find attractive new deals in a higher interest rate environment, leaving them sitting on $4tn of ‘dry powder’, or uninvested client funds.

The deal-by-deal approach can be an easier sell to investors. It often means lower, more bespoke management fees, though dealmakers can demand a bigger proportion of profits when the investment is sold on. But investors also know where their money is being spent from the start of the process.

“Deal-by-deal transactions are favoured by institutional investors because they have the opportunity to cherry pick their preferred companies,” said Sunaina Sinha Haldea, head of private capital at Raymond James. “These deals typically come with lower fees than traditional fund investing.”

Investor money can also be put to work and returned more quickly than from a traditional pooled fund, which is particularly relevant in a slower market where firms are earning fees on mountains of uninvested cash.

“A lot of general partners are sitting on dry powder,” said Matt Swain, chief executive of Triago, which specialises in raising money for these types of transactions. “The [deal-by-deal] management team won’t sit on their money which is important in this environment.”

Investment banks are looking to get in on the action. In December, California-based Houlihan Lokey announced a deal to buy Triago.

The difficult fundraising market has also increased the attractiveness of deal-by-deal investing to executives who want to set up on their own.

“The primary fundraising market has been challenging for everyone including named brands, and it’s almost been closed for first-time funds,” said Andy Lund, co-head of Houlihan Lokey’s private funds group. “There has been much more activity on the deal-by-deal front.”

For dealmakers who have struck out on their own, deal-by-deal investing can help them build a record and relationships with potential investors to tap if they want to raise a fund in the future.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

相关话题

欧洲现在必须停止对乌克兰袖手旁观

如果欧盟领导人真心认为基辅的独立至关重要,就必须部署作战部队来为任何停火提供保障。

AI是否已经“撞到南墙”?

OpenAI推出的乏善可陈的GPT-5模型表明AI进展正在放缓——该领域的竞争格局也在变化。

“巴约挂毯”如何成为软实力工具

为敲定这一被誉为英法关系改善佐证的协议,双方花了数月谈判。

全球各地的海滩能在沙源短缺中幸存吗?

从迈阿密到巴塞罗那,再到澳大利亚的黄金海岸,各国政府正努力拯救在气候变化加速侵蚀下的海岸线。

西班牙太阳能崩盘背后的故事

佩德罗•桑切斯称他的国家是向绿色能源转型的“全球典范”,但价格和利润却大幅下滑。

债市僵局

再谈调查回应率与劳工统计局。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×