Private equity backers raise new conflict concerns over sweetheart deals - 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。
商业快报

Private equity backers raise new conflict concerns over sweetheart deals

Investors question if some institutions rubber-stamp deals that could benefit other businesses
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":7.25,"text":"Big private equity backers have raised concerns that some of their peers may be waving through controversial deals where buyout firms sell companies to themselves, adding a fresh twist to worries about conflicts of interest inherent in the transactions."}],[{"start":21.55,"text":"Investors, including one big sovereign wealth fund and one of the biggest US public pension plans, told the FT they were worried about whether some institutions rubber-stamp asset sales to continuation vehicles when such a deal could benefit their other business lines."}],[{"start":38.1,"text":"Some large private capital firms invest in traditional buyout funds and also have secondaries businesses that back continuation vehicles — the dedicated entities set up by buyout firms to purchase assets from their older funds."}],[{"start":50.25,"text":"The head of investor relations at a large international buyout group said that certain US pension plans were now objecting to procedures whereby just a small committee of a fund’s backers tend to vote through the sale of one or more portfolio companies to a continuation vehicle."}],[{"start":65.5,"text":"There have long been worries about whether private equity firms themselves could be conflicted when a continuation vehicle buys an asset from one of the manager’s older funds. But investors in the selling funds are now questioning whether their peers have potential conflicts in deciding whether assets should be put into continuation vehicles."}],[{"start":85.45,"text":"The rise of continuation vehicles, which accounted for roughly a fifth of all private equity exits last year, and the growing pool of money dedicated to supporting such transactions have underlined concerns about occasions where private equity fund investors could find themselves on both sides of a transaction. "}],[{"start":103.05000000000001,"text":"Some institutional investors are demanding that a wider group of fund backers be required to approve selling assets to continuation vehicles, the private equity executive said. Backers of buyout funds “don’t love [continuation vehicles] as a way of exit”, the person said, adding that “they want greater consultation”."}],[{"start":121.45000000000002,"text":"The US pension plan told the FT that “limited partner advisory committees are becoming increasingly conflicted”, referring to the industry term for backers of buyout funds. They added that when committee members’ employers also had strategies dedicated to backing continuation vehicles, “it’s hard to know which interest they’re serving”. "}],[{"start":141.95000000000002,"text":"Private equity groups have turned to continuation vehicles in recent years, either to avoid selling companies at lower valuations in a difficult economic environment or to stay exposed to their best-performing assets. "}],[{"start":155.3,"text":"Last year there were more than $100bn of sales into continuation vehicles globally, up from about $70bn the year before. This compares with $7bn or less in 2015, according to Jefferies."}],[{"start":169.45000000000002,"text":"One investor described a recent incident where multiple members of the limited partner advisory committee on the fund selling assets to a continuation vehicle were employed by institutions whose other business lines would be investing in the same continuation vehicle. “They were quasi-insiders,” the investor said."}],[{"start":186.10000000000002,"text":"Another private equity executive said they had seen two recent instances of multi-strategy firms using potential commitments to a private equity firm’s future buyout fund to help secure preferential access to the same firm’s continuation vehicle."}],[{"start":201.3,"text":"Investors in a fund selling assets to a continuation vehicle are typically invited to cash out their stakes or reinvest in the new vehicle, usually after the buyout firm has completed a bidding process with third parties to set the price. "}],[{"start":216.3,"text":"The US pension plan executive suggested that bidders could offer to pay higher management or performance fees in a new fund “in exchange for a cheaper price” on the continuation vehicle. "}],[{"start":227.25,"text":"Firms such as Hamilton Lane, HarbourVest and Partners Group run both business lines. The firms, which declined to comment, have not been accused of any wrongdoing. "}],[{"start":237.4,"text":"One person from a multi-strategy group said that, where two business lines were involved in the same transaction, the buy side was represented by a separate investment team, avoiding the potential conflicts described to the FT. "}],[{"start":250.4,"text":"Another multi-strategy firm said that it recused itself from the selling fund’s committee where its other arm was on the buy side. It added that it was not market practice to offer commitments to future buyout funds in negotiations over continuation vehicles."}],[{"start":266,"text":"The Institutional Limited Partners Association recently released guidance on information that buyout groups should share with a selling fund’s investors about any side incentives received with each continuation vehicle bid."}],[{"start":278.9,"text":"“Describe any factors that excluded or favoured certain acquirers,” the guidance said. “Are there benefits that [you, the buyout firm] is receiving as part of the deal?”"}],[{"start":290.09999999999997,"text":"Mustafa Siddiqui, founder of dedicated secondaries firm SQ Capital, said “multi-strategy platforms inevitably come with conflicts of interest because they have to manage the competing interests of different businesses with different investors”. He added that walling off confidential information within each business line was “easier said than done”."}],[{"start":318.49999999999994,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1777272790_4676.mp3"}

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。

大型科技公司为何在英国煽动动荡?

埃隆•马斯克在贝尔法斯特、南安普顿及更广泛地区放大反移民情绪的做法,不能仅用意识形态来解释。

乌克兰和平窗口不会永远敞开

目前有机会让这场冲突“冻结”,但普京对“完全胜利”的幻想可能会成为障碍。

拉丁美洲的世界杯球衣如何沦为政治工具

极右翼民粹主义者已经把自家阵营的队服当成标志性符号,而左翼正试图夺回这块阵地。

欧洲股票具备美国同行无法匹敌的“和平红利”

如果伊朗冲突引发的能源短缺缓解,欧洲公司在复苏方面将获益更多。

哈利•波特毁了英国

我们最宝贵的资产已经被魔法部挪用。

为什么我们彼此不再交流?

与聊天机器人对话永远无法带来同样的人类滋养。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×