After the buyout boom: The bust?
December 18, 2006 (Jessica Seid Dickler, CNNMoney.com)
A string of deals led by private equity firms will push buyouts to record levels this year. But if things turn sour, look out.
The merger machine's rolling full steam ahead, and private equity investors are playing a bigger role than ever before - a trend that's likely to carry into 2007.
But some investors and merger experts are starting to worry that the slew of deal-making could come to a nasty end, especially if slower economic growth or a recession make it harder for companies to deal with the debt that's often involved in today's buyout deals.
AntiSpin: Add to the two generally acknowledged guarantees in life, death and taxes, a third: recessions after a massive speculative bubble has collapsed. And if we get a recession next year, as we've pointed out before, a bunch of uneconomical PE buy-outs will become even more uneconomical. It's not unlike the post tech stock bubble, except rather than the venture capital (VC) money drying up that's needed to keep uneconomical businesses running that were started during the boom, companies will be left trying to make huge principle and interest payments on debt.
December 18, 2006 (Jessica Seid Dickler, CNNMoney.com)
A string of deals led by private equity firms will push buyouts to record levels this year. But if things turn sour, look out.
The merger machine's rolling full steam ahead, and private equity investors are playing a bigger role than ever before - a trend that's likely to carry into 2007.
But some investors and merger experts are starting to worry that the slew of deal-making could come to a nasty end, especially if slower economic growth or a recession make it harder for companies to deal with the debt that's often involved in today's buyout deals.
AntiSpin: Add to the two generally acknowledged guarantees in life, death and taxes, a third: recessions after a massive speculative bubble has collapsed. And if we get a recession next year, as we've pointed out before, a bunch of uneconomical PE buy-outs will become even more uneconomical. It's not unlike the post tech stock bubble, except rather than the venture capital (VC) money drying up that's needed to keep uneconomical businesses running that were started during the boom, companies will be left trying to make huge principle and interest payments on debt.
"It's still going like a house afire," said Colin Blaydon, director of the Center for Private Equity and Entrepreneurship at Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business.
I expect the PE market will be on fire in a year or two the way the housing market is in some areas today.The risk, he and others said, is that a downturn in the economy could upset the applecart.
"If the debt markets have a crisis of confidence and there is a real turndown of the economy we could see a dramatic pullback," Blaydon remarked. "We know there will be a pullback, we just don't know when that is going to happen."
When, not if. We agree with Dean Baker at the Center for Economic and Policy Research who expects a recession no later than Q1 2008."If the debt markets have a crisis of confidence and there is a real turndown of the economy we could see a dramatic pullback," Blaydon remarked. "We know there will be a pullback, we just don't know when that is going to happen."
Of the $1.4 trillion in total U.S. merger deals announced so far this year, Blackstone Group, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. and other buyout firms account for about $370 billion, or 26 percent, of the total. That's not just a record in dollar terms but is more than twice the amount of private equity deals for all of 2005, according to Thomson Financial.
Sounds like a blow-off to me, especially since friends in private equity were claiming that the debt markets driving PE were "out of control" two years ago.But there are two other scenarios that could cripple the buyout market: a recession or another pickup in inflation, which could lead to higher interest rates - and rising payments for companies that have been acquired and loaded up with debt.
How about both? If a recession in the U.S. reduces the return on U.S. assets relative to others, foreign demand for them will decline. That reduces demand for dollars. That can lead to rising import prices that increase inflation pressure. Existing foreign holders of U.S. debt will want to be compensated for the increased inflation risk with higher interest rates. Higher rates will slow the economy further, reduce foreign demand for U.S. assets. And so on. The question is, when does the collapsing housing bubble get the ball rolling?"There's an endless appetite for credit now, and that's kind of scary," said one high-yield investment manager. "It's all liquidity-driven. Every day something else [another buyout deal] is being announced. It's a question of when the music stops."
I was told "soon" two years ago. The PE bubble goes on in typical bubble fashion, like a bad acid trip. Speaking of acid, will LSD come back in the next recession? Or coke? Or something new? Crime, especially in the neighborhoods where ugly lending practices have been tolerated by regulators for the past nine years and foreclosures are on the rise, has already arrived.If the economy gets bad enough, that could hurt corporate cash flow, and highly leveraged companies in particular could have trouble meeting debt payments.
Debtholders would face a jump in defaults by borrowers, and that could spark a wave of selling in the debt markets - or leave a lot of investors owning things they didn't want to own.
"In general, the average hedge fund certainly doesn't have the ability to manage a company in default," said Jay Ritter, a professor of finance at the University of Florida who specializes in corporate finance.
"It's a recipe for disaster," according to Justin Hillenbrand, a principal with private equity firm Monomoy Capital Partners, referring to a wave of new investors getting stuck with assets they don't want to own if there's a downturn. "That's the bigger concern than the huge run-up in private equity deals."
PE firms can restructure deals, take their medicine and move on, but many hedge funds will fold. I'm guessing 600 or so. But I have seen credible predictions in excess of 4000, or half the USIPs currently in operation. Debtholders would face a jump in defaults by borrowers, and that could spark a wave of selling in the debt markets - or leave a lot of investors owning things they didn't want to own.
"In general, the average hedge fund certainly doesn't have the ability to manage a company in default," said Jay Ritter, a professor of finance at the University of Florida who specializes in corporate finance.
"It's a recipe for disaster," according to Justin Hillenbrand, a principal with private equity firm Monomoy Capital Partners, referring to a wave of new investors getting stuck with assets they don't want to own if there's a downturn. "That's the bigger concern than the huge run-up in private equity deals."
Rumors last month that the buyout firms KKR and Texas Pacific Group would buy Home Depot (Charts) for $100 billion - which would be the biggest leveraged buyout in history - underscore the possibility that next year no company, and no sector, will be immune from the wave of buyouts.
Famous last words. By mid 2008, all companies and sectors will be as immune from the wave of PE leveraged buyouts as pets.com is immune today from receiving VC funding.
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