Top names in private equity, participating in an exclusive roundtable
Transcription
Top names in private equity, participating in an exclusive roundtable
Cover Photograph by ICT_Photo / Flickr / Getty Images Roundtable Sponsored by 022_MAJAug11 1 7/7/2011 9:04:27 PM Cover Photograph by ICT_Photo / Flickr / Getty Images ,FWJO"MCFSU Pantheon Ventures +BNFT)JMM Benesch 4UFWF,MJOTLZ New Mountain Capital 4IFSZM4DIXBSU[ Perseus, LLC $BSM5IPNB Thoma Bravo %BWJE5VSOFS Guardian Life Insurance (JKT'+WBO5IJFM 747 Capital ,FO.BD'BEZFO Mergers & Acquisitions Top names in private equity, participating in an exclusive roundtable, warn that those who don’t evolve will be left behind Photographs by Dan Nelken August 2011 023_MAJAug11 2 MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 23 7/7/2011 9:05:10 PM Roundtable 4 ince Lehman Brothers fell, participants in private equity have known changes to the asset class would be forthcoming. What has slowly developed has been a transformative status quo, in which sponsors aren’t necessarily being forced to change their stripes, but they are expected to make good on all past promises — whether it’s proprietary dealflow, operational capabilities, capital structure expertise, or any other value add that made it’s way onto a private placement memorandum. The downturn hasn’t only tested the mettle of the asset class, it has forced groups to build out and refine their processes around channeling dealflow, improving acquired assets, optimizing capital structures and establishing and maintaining relationships. This transformation, though, is occurring against a backdrop in which the economics are shrinking for GPs, who are facing pressure not only from their limited partners or the new competitive dynamics of the deal market, but also from regulators who have ratcheted up compliance efforts and a political discourse that presages foreboding changes to the tax structure. Mergers & Acquisitions brought together top names in the space, including both general partners and limited partners, who shared their expectations as to how the asset class will continue to evolve and what factors will drive the evolution for the fore- 24 MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 024_MAJAug11 3 seeable future. Sponsored by law firm Benesch, the roundtable included GPs such as Steven Klinsky, the managing director, founder and CEO of New Mountain Capital, and Carl Thoma, managing partner and co-founder of Thoma Bravo. Representing the LPs were Gijs F.J. van Thiel, co-founder of PE fund-offunds 747 Capital, and David Turner, the head of private equity for the Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America and a veteran of WestLB and the State of Michigan Retirement Systems. Perseus LLC senior managing director Sheryl Schwartz, the former head of TIAA-CREF’s alternative fund investment team, and Pantheon Ventures global head of business development Kevin Albert, who joined the fund of funds last year from Elevation Partners, each brought a com- August 2011 7/7/2011 9:04:38 PM posite perspective incorporating their experiences on both the GP and LP sides of the business. Meanwhile Benesch partner and executive chairman James Hill, who also chairs the law firm’s private equity practice, shared his ground-level view from working on behalf of clients involved in all areas of private equity. What emerged was a provocative picture of where the asset class is and where it is headed. The following is an edited version of the discussion. Mergers & Acquisitions: As we look at the future of private equity, it probably makes sense to consider the current state of the market. Here we are almost three years since the credit crisis really took hold, and it’s still difficult to gauge whether the predictions for the great shakeout will actually occur. There is still a $376 billion overhang, according to Cambridge Associates, suggesting that sponsors are slowly chipping away at their dry powder but still have a long way to go. Meanwhile, mega-deals have largely been pushed to the side, while financing in the small and micro-cap market is still tight, channeling most activity toward the middle. As a jumping off point, I’d like to get everyone’s take on the current environment for private equity as you see it and maybe touch upon some of the notable changes you’ve experienced since the dislocation. Albert: What I’ve witnessed and what I think we will continue to see is just a maturation of this market. In the 1980s and 1990s, most institutional investors were effectively new to the asset class. Since then, they’ve become very sophisticated. That has translated into more specialization, as limited partners really hone in on the value GPs are adding, whether it’s through operations or a sector focus. You’re also seeing a lot of limited partners culling their GP relationships down to a more manageable size. Van Thiel: The private equity market is cyclical and will always remain that way. As it relates to whether or not a shakeout will actually take place, I’d point to the VC market, which was hit pretty hard in the late 1990s. It didn’t happen in venture capital. What you saw was that a bunch of firms that managed to August 2011 025_MAJAug11 4 stick around and operate among the ‘living dead’ for the following decade. Now, we’re starting to see those groups re-emerge and think about raising their next funds. The point is that it’s pretty hard to kill off a private equity fund and managers have no incentive to dissolve voluntarily. At the same time, as Kevin alluded to, I think in- “ The key to any model is the structure of the economics. Sheryl Schwartz Perseus, LLC ” stitutional money is going to gravitate to managers who can set themselves apart — be it through operational excellence, proprietary dealflow, industry focus or something else. The question investors should be asking, however, is whether or not these advertised distinctions are real. Klinsky: If you look at the period from 1981 to 2000, the market maintained an upward trajectory, and it led to certain practices that I think people consider to be inherent to private equity. The use of leverage, for instance, made perfect sense during that time. In 1981, debt did create returns because you were operating in an environment with very high inflation, with interest rates that only moved lower for the next 10 years. In a sense, you could buy a business with absolutely no unit growth, lever it with 95 parts debt, watch inflation grow by 10%, and then triple your money in the first year. That was the story of the 1980s. In the 1990s, you essentially had the greatest bull market of all time. From January 1990 to the end of 1999, you could leverage just about anything and post an attractive return. If you just levered the stock mar- MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 25 7/7/2011 9:04:58 PM Roundtable ket, for example, you would have looked very smart. Going into this past decade, it has really been characterized by a choppy, up-and-down market. You can’t just count on an upcycle to bail you out anymore. When we launched New Mountain 11 years ago, we didn’t want to count on bull markets or bear markets, so we made it part of our fundamental thesis to concentrate on defensive growth industries and work to build businesses within these sectors. Generally speaking, I think private equity is evolving to be a form of business as opposed to merely a form of finance. Hill: I would just echo some of the points that have already been made. Private equity today is fundamentally different than it was 30 years ago, and it has also undergone some significant changes over the past five years. I’m sure we’ll hear more from the limited part- “ The move from valuing investments at cost to mark to market motivates GPs to put points on the board early. Gijs F.J. van Thiel 747 Capital ” 26 MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 026_MAJAug11 5 ners here today, but I get the sense that there is much more of a focus to find GPs who have been together for a period of time and have established a cohesive and proven team. I also think that they’re very much aware of the processes of their GPs. For instance, they wouldn’t be enamored with certain funds if they discovered that most of their dealflow emanated solely from wide-ranging, broadly focused auctions. And this scrutiny, beyond serving to raise the bar for many sponsors, has lengthened the fundraising process. It takes a lot longer for LPs to either say “yes” or “no” to a potential fund investment. Turner: My own personal opinion is that the more things change, the more they stay the same. With that said, there are some remarkable differences when considering the PE market today versus five years ago. The coordinated activism of the institutional limited partners, for instance, has gained a lot of traction, but there has been a movement afoot to standardize terms and conditions between GPs and LPs for years now. I think the progress could be considered somewhat of a watershed event, but it’s not necessarily a new effort on the part of limiteds. Thoma: I think I’m most pleased about the way the industry has stood tall compared to some of the other asset classes. People talk about the banks being stress tested, but I think the past few years have served to stress test private equity, and notwithstanding how the asset class may be portrayed in the press, the industry came through strong. As Steve said, the asset class has really evolved into a form of business. It’s about better corporate governance, and I believe private equity does that better than the public sector. Schwartz: As Gijs mentioned, we’re seeing all of the normal cycles that have played out in private equity since the asset class has been around. This time, though, changes to the regulatory regime and new accounting doctrine are exacerbating the cyclicality. The move to more of a mark-to-market accounting basis has had implications felt by both LPs and GPs. There’s more transparency, increased governance and a trend toward significantly more regulation, which together have made the asset class seem more volatile than past eras, at least on the surface. It’s always been cyclical, it’s just that the market values weren’t going up and down in real time. Mergers & Acquisitions: I think what David said makes sense, in terms of the more things change, the more they stay the same. The three legs to the private equity stool, for instance, remain buying right, generating earnings growth, and then selling at a higher multiple, while the leverage gooses August 2011 7/7/2011 9:05:05 PM Roundtable “ Private equity is evolving to be a form of business as opposed to merely a form of finance. the returns. What seems to have changed, however, are the processes involved, as Jim alluded to. From what I can tell, the GPs that are generating enthusiasm among institutional investors seem to have a blueprint in place that helps them source deals outside of a traditional auction; they have a proven ability to generate consistent growth across their portfolios, whether it’s through rollups, a specialist approach or some other strategy. And as a result, Steve Klinsky New Mountain Capital ” 28 MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 028_MAJAug11 6 exit, worry about the operations of the business. Of course, throughout all this, they were expected to be out finding their next deal. As a result, the pipeline for each particular partner wasn’t particularly deep at any given moment. There was no real division of labor. What we’ve seen over time is that the asset class has really adopted a set of best practices around organizational infrastructure. You’ll see partners brought in to specialize on business development and sourcing; other partners may handle the bulk of deal financing and relationships with lenders; of course, operational executives have become more prominent; and as PE registration looms, more and more firms are bringing in specialists to deal with compliance or investor relations. It’s more of a business and less of this independent, shootfrom-the-hip gunslinger mentality, in which partners hop on planes and hunt for deals. they’ve been able to line up profitable exits across multiple cycles. Increasingly rare is the shop made up of a handful of rainmakers and nothing else. I guess what I’m getting at is that a bifurcation seems to be taking place, in which those shops that have institutionalized their processes have really separated themselves from those boutique groups that are maybe stuck in 1994, and believe that one great deal will beget others? Mergers & Acquisitions: The evolution seems to be taking many forms. For instance, among the GPs here with us today, Thoma Bravo represents the continued refinement around a strategy that began with the buy and build; Sheryl’s appointment at Perseus underscores the renewed attention and sense of partnership GPs have with their limiteds; and the business Steve has built at New Mountain seems to encapsulate all of the characteristics Jim just described in terms of the institutionalization of the PE business. Steve, let me ask, when you set out to launch New Mountain after leaving Forstmann Little, what were some of the considerations you made in building the firm and creating a culture? Hill: I think you are seeing a bifurcation. At the same time there is a bit of a conundrum, especially for smaller funds, because these processes, not to mention the increasing demands of regulators and limited partners, all require an infrastructure. When I was young in this business, the predominant models were these funds in which everybody was a partner and each one was expected to go find their own deals. They would negotiate the transaction, close the deal, take a board seat and then, until the Klinsky: It was never about trying to differentiate ourselves. We just began with the mindset that risk doesn’t create returns; good business practices create returns. Our goal was to build an organization that could execute on that thesis. Over time, it has continued to evolve. Eleven years ago it was basically myself in a rented office, and now we have 800 people on our staff, and 50 investment professionals. But it’s a dynamic process and we’re continually trying to improve it by asking questions around all of the points August 2011 7/7/2011 9:05:24 PM we’ve alluded to. How do you find great companies outside of an auction? And how do you build those companies and take care of them? There is no set model, but we try to add people who make the whole organization stronger. And we try to avoid any silos, where an individual might think, “I have to find a deal, but what happens afterward doesn’t really concern me.” Mergers & Acquisitions: Are limited partners really aware of the processes in place or the expertise a GP builds out in a given market? Or, alternatively, is it really only about returns, and whether a GP can be considered a top-quartile or top-decile performer? Also, are limiteds more forgiving if there are processes in place, but perhaps a GP just missed on some bets? Schwartz: You really have to consider the different types of limited partners too. Gijs and David, for instance, have the in-house expertise to really analyze the smaller managers. They can dig in and pick out the upper-quartile players in a given segment. But on the other hand, the larger LPs, such as the state pensions, may not have the staff in place to evaluate the specialist funds and they tend to deal with a lot of turnover. That’s why these LPs prefer larger funds, because they’re also putting larger chunks of capital to work. There are other considerations too. The state pension funds, for instance, have to deal with FOIA issues; the insurance companies may have certain accounting requirements; while the endowments could have certain liquidity needs. Albert: I actually think limited partners would rank track record as No. 2 or No. 3 in terms of the criteria they’re using to select fund investments. The cohesiveness and culture of the firm, as well as the transparency they’re afforded into the operations are probably more important. Limited partners don’t want to be surprised. They don’t want to see style drift if it’s not something that was discussed as part of the strategy. That is the best way to blow up a relationship for a general partner. One thing that I’m not sure a lot of GPs really understand — a point that has really been driven home since I joined Pantheon — is this concept of portfolio construction. It’s not just about lining up all of the top-quartile funds. Limited partners are trying to assemble a fairly diversified portfolio, and if they’re successful, that will ensure that in any given market, at any given point in time, they’ll be backing a fund that is knocking the ball out of the park. Turner: Portfolio construction has always been part of LPs’ approach to private equity. I may be telling a tale out of school, but the truth is that in periods of oversupply, when the LP is spending 75% of their time just sifting through very good, competitive funds, you actually have less time to think about all of this. Also, FAS 157 has changed the game a bit. From an aggregate standpoint, when we’re looking at the performance numbers that come out of all the various groups we’re backing, you have to footnote the fact that these are all based on post FAS 157 valuations. August 2011 029_MAJAug11 7 “ Private equity firms are modeling out returns at 17% to 18%, which is just a little bit above mezzanine, because they want to put the money out. James Hill Across the board, though, all LPs clearly want more information, and they want it in a more timely manner. It’s up to the GPs to be responsive to not only their largest LPs, but basically all of their limiteds in order to have a diverse and reliable funding base. Van Thiel: If you step back a bit, we’re talking about the evolution of private equity. At it’s core, it’s about Benesch ” MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 29 7/7/2011 9:05:28 PM Roundtable “ Negotiating a limited partner agreement is not an end in and of itself; it’s not a bloodsport. buying businesses and executing a transformation. There was a period of time when the “transformation” part of the equation was less and less important, as leverage and access to the capital markets allowed people to get their money back really fast and generate attractive IRRs. I think what Sheryl was saying rings true, about the various motivations of LPs. For one group, an 8% IRR might be considered a fabulous outcome, whereas another group requires returns to be in the low 20% range. Having said that, at this point everyone should know that private equity is not about playing the capital markets; it’s about transforming companies and bringing together expertise and knowledge. In the early days, one partner could have this kind of impact. Today, it’s much more difficult, because everything is faster paced. The move from valuing investments at cost to mark to market motivates GPs to put points on the board early. That didn’t exist five years ago, David Turner Guardian Life Insurance ” MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 030_MAJAug11 8 Mergers & Acquisitions: That’s a perfect segue into how GPs have refined their approach in terms of ‘buying right’ — be it through proprietary deal flow, finding unique angles that allow for a premium, or just having a flawless operational plan in place from the start. From the LP perspective, do you even get into how investors are sourcing deals or the multiple paid on entry? Turner: I can’t tell you how many dozens of GPs come through our door every year with the same story, which is: “We have a differentiated strategy, we produce proprietary dealflow, and we offer some level of value add.” I usually have to stop nine out of every 10 within the first five minutes. I think it speaks to two different factors today. One goes back to the point I was making earlier regarding how much noise is out there for LPs to sift through. The other thing, which I think is important, is that it all goes back to execution. The fundamentals of the business haven’t changed. There are many different iterations and various models that have evolved. It’s an asset class that is constantly striving to take advantage of inefficiencies. It’s the groups that have been able to translate that into a process in which their performance is replicable that are able to distinguish themselves from their peers. Schwartz: It’s not that difficult to determine whether a GP truly has proprietary dealflow. At Perseus, the firm is only focusing on certain sectors, and the deals come naturally because they have a network in place. Industry expertise also provides an angle that’s different, so sponsors can come at deals almost like a strategic and base the valuation on what they can do with the assets that others can’t. when GPs could slowly build an asset, and even drag it into negative territory for a period of time, without having any impact on the books of their LPs. That’s a big change. Some limiteds are even somewhat blinded 30 by the accounting treatment because they prefer that GPs are coming out of the J-curve that much quicker. But while the whole business is accelerating, the end game is still the same: it’s about how much did you buy the company for versus how much you received on the sale. Thoma: Sometimes this means that you actually work backwards. You can model out, for instance, that you want to make three times your money and a 25% IRR over four years, so what can I pay and what operational assumptions are necessary to get to that goal. We might pay $100 million for an asset, August 2011 7/7/2011 9:05:55 PM which seems like a lot if somebody else only wants to pay $80 million, but we believe we can get more cash flow out of the assets than other buyers; that’s going to influence our pricing. I think too many people in our business focus on the entry multiple instead of what they’re going to do with the assets post close. so we’re better able to convince sellers to work with us on the side. Hill: There’s also a certain level of emotional intelligence that seems to come through. I have been on both sides of management presentations, and the Hill: It’s interesting, because it’s not always easy to distinguish those buyers from the firms that may have lowered their internal goals. In some of the auctions we’ve seen, private equity firms are modeling out returns at 17% to 18%, which is just a little bit above mezzanine, because they want to put the money out. Maybe they’ve had some strong realizations over the past 12 months, and they’re trying to put capital to work or they’re just facing the end of their fund lives. Without naming names, you get the sense that this happening based on where a particular sponsor is in their fund life. Mergers & Acquisitions: And I imagine there is one of these groups in every auction, which makes proprietary dealflow — whether it’s actual deals outside of auctions or pre-emptive efforts — so important. Does anyone want to provide an example of how they’ve gone about sidestepping an auction? Klinsky: We have a process every year where we’ll devise a list of particular industries we’re going to focus on and then we’ll dedicate a team to each of these segments. Two years ago, after Rohm & Haas was sold to Dow, the former CEO of Rohm [Raj Gupta] joined us and around him we built out a specialty chemicals team. A year later, that effort yielded an acquisition of a Covidien division that sells laboratory chemicals. It didn’t come through an auction; it wasn’t for sale; and it wasn’t something that was hatched on the golf course. It came about because we identified the sector, staffed up around it, and then found a business that matched what we were looking for. It’s what we try to do consistently. That’s not to say that investments we make won’t sometimes start off through an auction. But we’re going to pick the space first, and lay the groundwork, August 2011 031_MAJAug11 9 “ Limited partners would rank track record as No. 2 or No. 3 in terms of the criteria they’re using. Kevin Albert connection that develops between the executives and the bidders can be critical, especially if you’re talking about a property that is not a sponsor-owned business and management is staying on board. You’ll see some groups who are really good at establishing these connections and they will win deals in auctions when they’re not even close to the highest price. Pantheon Ventures ” Mergers & Acquisitions: And for the limiteds here, are you actually tracking the purchase price multiples and referencing comparables? Van Thiel: I think “proprietary deal flow” is one of the most over-used themes we’ll hear in presentations — there is no such thing, really. First of all, you need to have a willing seller, and the seller is always your biggest competition. Even if it’s negotiated outside of an auction, there’s a line of others who have looked at the asset in the past, not to mention friends of the CEO, whispering in their ears about what the company is worth. So proprietary dealflow doesn’t mean that you are the only buyer. I take it to mean that a private equity firm is “the buyer of choice,” which is a much MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 31 7/7/2011 9:05:44 PM Roundtable “ Too many people in our business focus on the entry multiple instead of what they’re going to do with the assets post close. better way for a firm to distinguish itself. It doesn’t just mean they’re willing to pay the highest price. It’s about what they can bring in terms of understanding the industry dynamics; it’s about a strategic vision for a particular company. With all that said, we do look at the multiples and we do track comparable transactions and try to figure out if the GP overpaid. But it’s hard when you’re sit- Albert: Operations is a pretty universal theme. I mean, Clayton, Dubilier & Rice has been at it since its inception. They’ll bring on operating partners as a full partner at the firm. Then there are others that will put together a bench of executives, and maybe they will be paid on retainer. At some firms, the operators might be involved in the due diligence, and the funds will have them buy into the deal before they even make the investment. There are all kinds of different models, and they can all work. What makes it difficult to project is that ultimately private equity is a people business and you can’t always figure out why something works and something doesn’t on the surface. Carl Thoma Thoma Bravo ” ting in the LP chair, and not at the negotiating table where the sellers and management teams hammer out what an asset is worth. Mergers & Acquisitions: What about operations? How do LPs really track what works and what doesn’t for GPs? Hill: It’s a generic phrase, actually. Everybody knows now that GPs have to improve operations, but the approach is different at every firm. Some firms, certainly, have processes in place. It is evident that the operating talent is getting involved as early on as the deal sourcing stage, where they’re strategizing about how to generate growth and how that plays into the 32 MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 032_MAJAug11 10 valuation. At the same time, you’ll see these situations in which there are operating partners on staff or as part of an advisory board and it’s made up of executives who have been out of an industry for 10 or 20 years. They may have served as a chairman of a Fortune 500 company, but if I’m an LP, I’m not sure I’d be too excited about relying on that person to perform due diligence or expect them to really roll up their sleeves and get engaged after the deal. Schwartz: I think the key to any model is the structure of the economics. GPs have to make sure that there is an alignment of interest, which from a limited partners’ perspective can often be very difficult to ascertain. I remember one time, at TIAA-CREF, I met an operating partner and he was working for another one of our GPs at the same time. He had an arrangement with both of them, but you wouldn’t know that if you were just doing your due diligence on one of the firms he was with. You have to ask whether their industry expertise is truly aligned with the goal of maximizing the value of the company for the GP. Are they paid out of the profits? Do they invest their own money? Do they also get paid from the other activities of the GP? I think the economic terms, and particularly the capital they, themselves, are investing, are the most important factors. The problem is that this can often be one of the hardest areas to dig into. The GPs will map out the carry of the various partners, but they’ll just group everyone else together in some other vague category. Van Thiel: It’s important to note that nowhere in our process of screening GPs do we ask: “Who are August 2011 7/7/2011 9:05:59 PM your operating partners?” We want to see how GPs add value, and there is nothing set in stone that sponsors need operating partners to generate returns. Maybe they’re really savvy with buy-and-build strategies; maybe their knowledge set is on the financing and balance sheet side of the business and that’s what drives value. It’s funny, because I think most teams believe that they should have an operating bench to point to as part of their presentation, but that’s not necessarily the value-add LPs are looking for. Hill: Sometimes you’ll see it serve as a double edged sword in a process too. Most industries are pretty fraternal to the point that everybody knows everyone else. Occasionally, you’ll see situations in which it can be threatening to the sellers’ management team. They’ll always want to know: “What exactly is this guy’s role?” Investors just have to play it very carefully, because there’s the risk that the current management team feels threatened and it turns them off from the start. Thoma: The whole debate about operating partners, at least as far as I’m concerned, is pretty easy: just show us the results before and after they got involved, and if growth accelerates and margins climb, then you can attribute that to the operating team. But our operating partners have one mandate and that is to make the CEO of the company look good. Their job is to be a coach. We target rollups, and when you’re starting with a company that posts $10 million in earnings, and four years later they’re doing $70 million, you need somebody that can help management along and identify what’s going to happen next as the company grows. But they’re behind the scenes. Klinsky: All of this goes back to being a “buyer of choice.” Sellers want to know how you can bring value, and sometimes it might be experts who can help with a sourcing strategy or maybe they have some insight into the customer base that a company is targeting. Other times it might be a situation in which the seller is looking to keep a quarter or 30% of the business. We prefer these investments, because it removes us from a situation in which someone is selling 100% and whichever duck quacks the loudest or whoever puts forward the craziest offer is going to get the prize. August 2011 033_MAJAug11 11 Ultimately, I don’t think ‘operations’ is about relying on this one genius who is going to be parachute into a situation and fix everything. We come from a family business background, and I think that serves as a backdrop to our efforts in creating a flat culture in which the entire team seeks to add value. Turner: Just to add one quick thought, I think it’s absolutely critical for GPs to include their LPs in this process. Most limiteds want to truly understand how GPs built value in a particular company. So as opposed to the perfunctory five minute call with an exCEO, which isn’t at all revealing, it would be much more valuable to go spend half a day with the portfolio company. I think the more LPs involve themselves, and the more accommodating the GPs are, you’ll see a higher level of confidence that develops, which would become a fundamental part of the GP/LP partnership. Mergers & Acquisitions: Switching gears here, it makes sense to discuss leverage. Steve alluded to it earlier, but how has the approach to debt changed for private equity post credit crisis? Klinsky: I think if you had interviewed people eight years ago, they would have told you that private equity investors create returns by taking on more risk, which equates to piling on more debt. Today, leverage is viewed as a corporate finance decision. We figure out the fundamental value of a business and take it from there. It can be a sweetener, but I don’t think investors simplistically depend on debt the way people assumed they did. There’s an appreciation that overleverage can kill a company or restrain growth. Albert: I think limited partners have become more sophisticated in how they look at debt too. They used to believe, like everyone else, that debt is good. The financial shocks that occurred in 2008 were terrifying, as you saw all of these mega buyouts that were highly leveraged and effectively on their way to going bankrupt. It didn’t happen because the Federal Reserve drove interest rates down and those companies were able to recapitalize, but the upshot is that people have a much healthier attitude toward leverage and risk management. For instance, there is a difference between operating risk and financial risk, and taking on both is probably a bad combination. Firms like “ Most limiteds want to truly understand how GPs built value in a particular company. David Turner Guardian Life ” MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 33 7/7/2011 9:06:03 PM Roundtable Silver Lake, that operate in the tech space, tend to use very little leverage because they’re taking on a lot of operating risk. “ When you recap, it actually requires more attention from the GPs. Gijs F.J. van Thiel 747 Capital ” Schwartz: One of the key components of the alpha equation is whether or not the GP really knows how to use the debt markets to maximize the value of their portfolio companies. Do they know when to refinance, for instance, or alternatively, when it’s not appropriate. During the heyday, three years ago, GPs were going in, refinancing, swapping in covenant lite loans and really preparing their companies with a capital structure that offered more flexibility. During the downturn, you also saw GPs work with the banks to refinance, amend and extend, and get allowances that the companies most likely wouldn’t have been able to get from the banks on their own. Today, the smart GPs recognize that we’re in a low interest rate environment, so while inflation is increasing, let’s lock down long-term, low-cost debt. They’re adding value, because they’re thinking two, three years out about where interest rates will be and how they can re-jigger the capital structure to maximize value, liquidity and options. Hill: Just to add a contrarian point, debt is so cheap, in a lot of situations it seems like leverage has come back to 2007 levels. I’ve seen some companies sold in the past six months that fetched more than they would have received four years ago. Of course, the lower interest rates mean it’s cheap, but I think it underscores that institutional memory is short, from the standpoint of both lenders and GPs. Mergers & Acquisitions: I’d be curious about how some of the LPs here feel about dividend recaps. They don’t necessarily imply that a company is being overleveraged, but does your stance on debt change at all when it leads to a distribution and you’re getting money back? Albert: There was actually a Coller Capital survey that came out yesterday suggesting that limiteds are actually very excited about the ability to execute dividend recaps again. I think it depends on the progress that has been made with the company in terms of its growth, but it’s also a function of the fact that debt is so cheap. 34 MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 034_MAJAug11 12 Van Thiel: Leverage is always going to have its positives and negatives. What’s a dirty word for some can be great for others. With small funds, which are our focus, you generally need the flexibility of a strong balance sheet because you’re usually dealing with high-growth companies. If a buyer wants to lever these companies up and that translates into a premium on the exit, fantastic. Because of the debt markets’ recent strength, we’re actually encouraging all of our managers to sell and we’re seeing exit multiples escalating. A recap, though, is right there in the middle. Yes, it’s nice to get your money back, but while GPs are holding onto that asset for the foreseeable future, they’re also exposing it to additional risks. Of course, it depends on the LP, but we are much more inclined to tell our managers to sell, and perhaps swallow a lower multiple on the exit, than to to recap and take on the additional risk. I think people tend to forget sometimes that when you recap, it actually requires more attention from the GPs, because suddenly the asset is a higher risk item in their portfolio. Hill: I think some private equity firms will take the mindset that once they get their initial investment back, they’re playing with house money. But I’ve seen it go awry when you’re dealing with a growth company and sponsors have executed two, maybe three recaps. It can put the management under tremendous pressure because they may not have the working capital line that is necessary, and ultimately it can have an impact on the value of the ongoing asset. It has to be something that management feels good about. Klinsky: There are different flavors of recaps. You can have an asset that started off at four times debt to Ebitda. As the business grew, the debt gets paid down, and after a certain period of time, you lever it back up to four times and reward investors with a dividend. I think that’s a pretty good outcome. Thoma: When we acquire a business we’ll never have the optimal amount of leverage. Operational improvements and synergies from tuck-in acquisitions will bring the leverage down pretty quickly, so we will probably refinance the vast majority of our companies within 18 months. We will always look at the sale versus recap opportunity, but the alternative isn’t always as attractive as the recap. August 2011 7/8/2011 10:52:51 AM Mergers & Acquisitions: To switch gears again, we’ve been discussing the refined processes of GPs, and alluding to things that require more resources. At the same time, I know we’ve mentioned the ILPA Principles at least a few times, but we haven’t really touched upon how the compression of fee income — assuming it is inevitable — is going to impact how general partners put capital to work. Beyond just smaller management and transaction fees, the trend line seems to suggest smaller fund sizes, and this is all before we even consider the cost of Dodd Frank’s registration requirements or the prospect that legislators could rewrite the tax code to reverse the capital gains treatment for carry. Thoma: All those issues you just mentioned, you obviously don’t like them as a GP, but we got into this business to build companies. Are we going to make a little less money as a result of the changing dynamics? August 2011 035_MAJAug11 13 Yes. But you have to get up in the morning and do what what you enjoy doing and quit worrying about things that are beyond your control. Turner: Just to address the ILPA Principles, I would say that negotiating a limited partner agreement is not an end in and of itself; it’s not a bloodsport. Neither GPs nor LPs are approaching it as if there is going to be a winner and a loser. The idea is to craft a partnership agreement and define how you’re going to live together over the span of what will be a 10- or 12-year fund life. I guess the codification of the ILPA Principles is certainly a very strong statement. So what’s the real implication of that? It means that there was probably an imbalance in the LP/GP relationship, and that the power pendulum is moving back in the direction of the limited partners. The goal, though, is to align interests, so that when things are going well, all parties “ There’s an appreciation that overleverage can kill a company. Steven Klinsky New Mountain Capital ” MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 35 7/7/2011 9:06:26 PM Roundtable are making money. Schwartz: There’s also a huge movement in which the larger investors are opting for separately managed accounts, where they have customized terms with the GPs. Like we mentioned earlier, there are different types of LPs with different priorities and objectives. So some are focused on fees and expenses, some might be seeking co-investment opportunities, and others might be trying to structure in liquidity options or opt outs because they have a CSR mandate that makes blind pools difficult. Among the larger LPs, though, I expect more to move toward separately managed account structures, in which there is a closer relationship between LPs and GPs, and a greater flow of information. I think this will be more of a permanent thing. “ The funds that are probably the most impacted are the smaller groups. James Hill Benesch ” Hill: It’s important to note that ILPA isn’t being adopted word for word on either the GP or LP side. With that said, the funds that are probably the most impacted are the smaller groups; those managing $300 million to $750 million, and of course smaller funds too. These firms are relying not only on their 2% management fee, but they were also leaning on the transaction fees and ongoing portfolio management fees. As that pendulum swings pretty dramatically in the other direction, it’s harder to add all of the back-office resources that limited partners now expect. Many of the large state pension funds, perhaps rightly so, were becoming concerned — with respect to the multi-billion dollar funds — that the carry was becoming secondary as a profit driver to the various streams of fee income. The problem is that this doesn’t translate down to the much smaller entities, which don’t have the benefit of a $20 billion fund from which to draw a management fee. So that’s something that’s creating a lot of tension in the small and middle market. Schwartz: I’d also add that the disclosure of fees when companies go public has also exacerbated the issue, because LPs weren’t necessarily aware of how much income GPs were generating from this. Now all you have to do is read the public documents. Turner: To go back to the economics for a moment, I’d just cite one example. When we’re putting 36 MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 036_MAJAug11 14 together an LPA, we’ll have a discussion with the GPs about their costs. It’s probably not much different than the type of due diligence a sponsor performs as part of an investment. We’ll discuss in detail how much it costs a fully resourced firm to go out and source deals, the sunken costs of broken transactions, and the absolute essentials to run a private equity firm on a day-in and day-out basis. In one particular case, we were having conversations with a small partnership raising their first fund. And we determined that it would cost more than the 2% management fee on the targeted fundraise to cover their costs. So sometimes this argument can turn around and bite you. Hill: So did you give them three percent? Turner: They actually raised more money. I think it goes back to the goal of finding full alignment, though. Klinsky: Fortunately, I’m not fundraising for a few years, so I don’t have to think about terms every day. I would say, though, that I don’t think the private equity industry gets enough credit when it comes to how good and proper the terms really are. Just imagine, for a second, that if the CEO of a public company sold his stock options at a profit and then eight years later, after the stock tanked, he signed a personal guarantee to return all of the gains that were made on the sale. Concepts like the clawback, for instance, don’t exist anywhere except in private equity. Mergers & Acquisitions: How does it all affect buying behavior? If you ratchet back the fee income, all of a sudden private equity shifts back to becoming more of a lumpier business model. So does it change the mindset of GPs to become singles and doubles hitters or, alternatively, do they take on more risks in the pursuit of home runs and bigger paydays? Albert: Limited partners, amid all of this, are equally focused on having sponsors invest their own capital, ideally outside of a fee waiver. Ironically, the popularity of fee waivers underscored the fact that management fees were so plentiful, they weren’t even needed to actually operate the business. But I agree with Jim. If you’re below $750 million in terms of fund size, it’s going to be a pinch. If you’re investing your own personal capital, that should modulate your August 2011 7/7/2011 9:06:30 PM willingness to try to hit home runs. Schwartz: I think you raise a good point about LPs seeking out GP commitments, but at the same time, most of these people are so wealthy that the amount they’re putting in, while it seems like a lot, is not that significant in terms of a percentage of their net worth. Albert: It’s probably harder to figure out what actually motivates them than whether their commitment is a significant portion of their net worth. Basically, sponsors have their reputation, their pride and their money. For most, those three are the motivation. Van Thiel: To go back to the larger question of what is going to happen to private equity as the new economic picture takes hold, this is something that we think about a lot. We haven’t figured out if it’s going to have a net positive or negative impact, but what I think it will do is bring higher motivated teams to the forefront. There was a period where pretty much anybody who had completed three transactions thought they could raise a buyout fund. You pull together three partners, three associates, raise $200 million, collect a $4 million management fee, and that’s a pretty good life. That’s not going to be so easy to pull together anymore. I can’t speak for the larger buyout firms, but on the small end, sponsors are using their funds to lever their own investments. They are not driven by the economics of fund management; they’re driven by leveraging their ability to invest really well. We don’t shy away from asking them how big their commitment is in relation to their net worth, and whether they’ll miss it if it’s not there tomorrow. In the small buyout world, we will see changes. There will be fewer young spinouts, because it’s just too expensive and it becomes very, very inefficient if you can’t get to a certain fund size pretty fast. But getting to a certain fund size is not a recipe for success. I think we will see more experienced people coming into the market, who are comfortable and have a track record with small funds. CUSTOM MEDIA GROUP August 2011 037_MAJAug11 15 MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS 37 7/7/2011 9:06:55 PM