Institutional Investor (March 27)
Private equity funds just have too much money: They are struggling to find potentially profitable investments, can’t sell companies they already own, and are being pressured by exasperated limited partners.” The buyout industry holds “$1.2 trillion in unspent capital… and 24 percent of that total has been held for four years or longer.” Buyout funds are simultaneously “having trouble selling the companies they already own,” with fully “$3.6 trillion of unrealized value in some 29,000 unsold companies in the funds’ portfolios.” The massive overhang “is leading investors to slam shut their pocketbooks to new funds.”
Tags: Buyout industry, Exasperated, Investors, Money, Overhang, Partners, Portfolios, Pressured, Private equity, Profitable investments, Struggling, Unrealized value, Unsold companies, Unspent capital
Institutional Investor (August 14)
“A public market downturn and an abundant supply of private equity stakes have culminated in an unmissable opportunity for secondaries investors.” Favorable “supply/demand imbalances and market dynamics” have arisen due to “the dramatic outperformance of private equity thanks to lagged marks and flat or marginally down valuations in 2022,” causing “asset owners to become overweight PE as public equity markets declined materially.” Pensions, endowments, foundations and other asset owners have become “forced sellers of private equity stakes to return to their strategic weights,” and “because of illiquidity, overhang, supply/demand imbalance, and forced selling, buyers require a material discount to transact.”
Tags: Asset owners, Discount, Downturn, Endowments, Forced selling, Foundations, Illiquidity, Imbalances, Market dynamics, Opportunity, Outperformance, Overhang, Overweight, Pensions, Private equity, Secondaries investors, Supply, Valuations
