The Private Equity Bubble Is About to Deflate(bloomberg.com)
bloomberg.com
The Private Equity Bubble Is About to Deflate
https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2024-07-09/the-private-equity-bubble-is-about-to-deflate
12 comments
What does “correction” look like in your opinion? PE impacts quite a lot of the job force, 8-9% of GDP; do these companies get sold, or just squeezed dry, to try and recoup investments during zirp?
A couple different ways to answer that question.
For portcos, you'll definitely see the focus on costs. That means restructuring/layoffs, contraction from non-key markets, and reduced growth initiatives.
PE is going to be loathe to sell at a loss, though you'll see some horse-trading between some firms. So that would be a last resort, though we are already seeing some write-downs, like Vista/PluralSight last month[1].
More broadly, you'll see lower valuations and tightening in the credit markets that may affect macroeconomic slowdowns.
Most of this isn't exclusive to PE: interest rates and other drives are affecting non-PE similarly in the form of increased borrowing costs, tighter credit conditions, and general economic uncertainty. The contrarian view may be that PE portcos are better able to navigate those waters given the focus on business fundamentals and operating maturity.
[1] https://www.axios.com/2024/05/31/vista-equity-pluralsight
For portcos, you'll definitely see the focus on costs. That means restructuring/layoffs, contraction from non-key markets, and reduced growth initiatives.
PE is going to be loathe to sell at a loss, though you'll see some horse-trading between some firms. So that would be a last resort, though we are already seeing some write-downs, like Vista/PluralSight last month[1].
More broadly, you'll see lower valuations and tightening in the credit markets that may affect macroeconomic slowdowns.
Most of this isn't exclusive to PE: interest rates and other drives are affecting non-PE similarly in the form of increased borrowing costs, tighter credit conditions, and general economic uncertainty. The contrarian view may be that PE portcos are better able to navigate those waters given the focus on business fundamentals and operating maturity.
[1] https://www.axios.com/2024/05/31/vista-equity-pluralsight
This article is too strong on vibes and lacks data beyond "there's a lot more money in private equity than there used to be."
Also, private equity includes a broad range of investors, from angels that fund unlikely-to-ever-be-profitable startups to leveraged buyout firms that take large companies private because they think they can do better than current management, to vulture funds that snap up bankrupt companies.
I'm not even clear what the author is talking about here.
Also, private equity includes a broad range of investors, from angels that fund unlikely-to-ever-be-profitable startups to leveraged buyout firms that take large companies private because they think they can do better than current management, to vulture funds that snap up bankrupt companies.
I'm not even clear what the author is talking about here.
It's hard to get reliable data in this space.
PE funds also sell to each other and mark profits on both sides of transaction. Hard to unravel.
Since 2021 I keep reading doomsayer articles about how one part of the economy (or the whole thing) is going to crash. I feel like pundits just put out a negative naysayer article every six months so if it happens they point back and say "see, I called it"!
ZeroHedge.com, they say, has predicted 87 of the last 3 crises.
If this is true-- I have no idea!-- and you are young and working this is great news. A crash is a good opportunity too.
All of a sudden SaaS vendors that no longer have their round C, D, {insert-letter} funding are raising their prices.
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PE is fueled by interest rates, and the entire thesis has flipped from revenue/growth to EBITDA. The shift is exposing some dogs: both PortCos that can't hide fundamental business model issues behind cheap capital and PE firms that can't lead operations and financing in a new environment. The correction is well underway.