Private equity investors are fantastic fathers, kindly philanthropists - and Private equity investors are fantastic fathers, kindly philanthropists - and "A boon to the British economy" (Tony Blair)

PRIVATE EQUITY AS A 'SUPERIOR MODEL OF CAPITALISM'?

SOME THINGS TO THINK ABOUT.

Currently, there is a great uproar about private equity - some say it is simply a latter-day extension of the leveraged buyout boom of the 1980's, with private equity companies characterised as the 'Gluttons at the Gate'. Trades Unions are up in arms, vilifying the greed, asset-stripping habits and heartless nature of private equity capitalists. Many others question whether the private equity boom will provide good long-term investment results or whether we are seeing the inflation of yet another financial bubble, with the destruction of viable companies as a damaging by-product.
Conversely, there are many defenders of private equity. They claim that private equity investors generate superior returns for their shareholders; that private equity is clean and simple, not cluttered by all the governance bureaucracy of the publicly quoted sector. Others assert that the close attentions of investors spurs sluggish managers into upping their acts, that private equity ownership is positively beneficial to companies and actually causes them to perform better and create employment.

What is Private Equity Investment? What is all the fuss about?

In the current shouting match about private equity, there are prominent proponents and opponents. Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, together with many journalists and prominent figures in the private equity business have fulsomely praised the wonders of private equity as a boon to the UK economy, creator of jobs and exemplar of the UK's pre-eminent position in world financial markets.
Detractors include the European and UK trades unions, some continental European politicians, one of whom described private equity investors as 'locusts'. Journalists are divided - as would be expected - those from the more right wing end of the spectrum like the 'Economist' seem to view the growth of private equity as signalling the arrival of a new golden age of capitalism, whilst those with a more social democrat leaning view it with grave misgivings.
But what are they describing? Nearly all the proponents and detractors are much clearer about their opinions than about the animal on which they are opining.
Here is a little clarification. Private equity investment can be divided into at least three categories, each of which is quite different from the other.

Category One is Venture Capital,

which is investing in new businesses, start-ups and often advanced technology ventures. Many of the businesses in the Cambridge University science park come into this category. The world leader by a long way in venture capital investment is the United States - the true venture capital investment industry in the UK is miniscule by comparison.
Most UK investors are purely financial in their skills and therefore tend not to develop a deep understanding of the companies and technologies in which they invest. This, allied to a strong risk-aversion, makes the environment for high tech and other start-ups quite different to the US, where there is a far greater diversity of investment types and skills. Venture capital investment is risky, but it represents the true creation of the seed-corn for the future. It is economically beneficial and crucial to Gordon Brown's vision of a high tech Britain - would that we had more of it.

Category Two is 'traditional' private equity investment.

Investors in this category take funds from private individuals, and tend also to invest some of their own capital. They build portfolios of smaller companies in which they invest and will typically expect to live with their investments for 5 to 10 years, take a close interest in the business and work with management to improve and grow it. They can be differentiated from venture capitalists in the fact that they buy established businesses in which they see the prospects of significant growth rather than brand new start-ups. This type of private equity investors generally aim to make their returns from the growth potential of the businesses in which they invest. Crispin Tweddle's long-established Piper Trust comes into this category.

Category Three is represented by the recent wave of large private equity funds.

These funds attract very large amounts of capital from private investors and some pension funds, promise very high returns and seek to achieve them through 'leveraging' their investments. This category of investment has seen explosive growth in the last few years, at the expense of equity investment through stock markets. Typically these investors will seek to buy companies at a discount to their assumed market value. They then borrow heavily, (the UK provides tax relief on these borrowings), load companies with debt and extract as much cash and 'surplus' assets as possible. Managers are placed in the companies and heavily incentivised to push as hard as possible for quick performance. The investors take out very high fees, typically in the region of 2% of the funds under management. Returns are made on the amount of cash and assets taken out of the companies and on the resale value compared with the purchase value. Investors will typically try to arrange an exit from their investments in 3 to 5 years.

It is this form of private equity that is attracting most of the controversy. What can be said is that the Primary Purposes of this type of private equity companies are to maximise returns for private investors, investment managers and company top executives. If there are beneficial effects for employees, customers and society in general, they are incidental to these central purposes.
Most of the evidence about the effects of this recent form of private equity investment is circumstantial - some refers to the decline in customer service, some to sweeping reductions in workforces, and to weakened competitive stamina. Proponents claim superb job creation and wealth creation for the economy. The current lack of serious research and very woolly understanding of what is meant by private equity doesn't appear to inhibit many commentators, opponents and proponents alike, from shooting off their mouths quite freely!
Despite the secrecy of private equity investors and the timidity of regulatory bodies some serious research is beginning to emerge on the dynamics and effects of this latest financial innovation. See for example the work of Prof. Karel Williams, Julie Froud et al, referred to at the end of this piece.

A Non-financial commentary.

Here is a strictly non-financial review of some factors that crucially affect corporate performance, which may help you to form a view of the pluses and minuses of private equity capitalism.

What makes businesses successful?

For the sake of making the contrast clear, it can be said that there are two fundamentally different 'Models' of what makes companies successful.

Model One - some key assumptions.

Model Two - key assumptions.

'Large' private equity is clearly Model Two.

The declared aim of these private equity funds is to provide its investors and managers with returns outstripping other forms of investment including the public equity markets. The Economist recently described them as espousing a "Superior model of capitalism".

Is one or the other Model 'Superior'?

In one corner is the 'Shareholder Value' model. Proponents maintain that the primary purpose of enterprises is to satisfy the needs of their financial owners.
There is formidable support for this from mainstream economists, the bulk of the financial press, including the Economist, and the full might of the investment banks and financial markets. Tony Blair and Gordon Brown recently described private equity as a boon to the British economy. Proponents aver that superior performance is achieved by continuous pressure for financial results through lean investment and stringent cost cutting. They support the idea of economic regeneration through 'creative destruction'.
The shareholder value model is predominantly Anglo-American and has only made limited inroads into Japan, India and continental European economies.

In the other corner is the 'Living Company' model; proponents of which claim that superior performance cannot be achieved by aiming directly for financial results but only through creating vibrant and innovative organisations providing customers with superior value over their competitors.
Supporting this philosophy are many researchers who have sought to look inside sustainably high performing organisations, and authors like Arie de Geus and Charles Handy.
Japan and continental European countries such as Sweden, Norway, Finland, Holland and Germany tend to espouse these philosophies.

Interesting questions.

Recommended reading

Serious research into the activities and effects of the 'new' forms of private equity investment is relatively scarce, thus leaving ample room for proponents and opponents to shout abuse at each other without being overly bothered by the facts.
Strongly recommended reading is a very recent study by Professor Karel Williams, Julie Froud et al of the University of Manchester:
Private Equity and the Culture of Value Extraction, Centre for Research in Socio-Cultural Change (CRESC).


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