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Private Equity Crash Straight Ahead

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  • Private Equity Crash Straight Ahead

    Private equity firms buy undervalued or under appreciated companies, impose short-term improvements and sell them for a fast profit. Some of the companies they've bought include Hertz, La Quinta, Dunkin Donuts, and Toys R Us. Josh Kosman, a private equity expert, says that the way the firms have been able to buy these businesses — through leveraged buyouts — means the majority of the money for the buyout has come from loans that the firms dump on the company they're supposedly fixing.

    Now burdened with debt, many of those companies owned by private equity firms are in danger of defaulting. In a new book, Kosman writes that it's likely half of the 3,188 American companies bought by private equity firms between 2000 and 2008 could collapse. His book is called The Buyout of America: How Private Equity Will Cause the Next Great Credit Crisis.

    Fresh Air Podcast with Author: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/s...ryId=120391729

    Josh Kosman has been covering the financial industry for twelve years. He is as an editor at Mergermarket.com and a former senior writer for The Deal and senior reporter for the trade publication Buyouts Newsletter. He appears frequently in the media as a private equity and mergers expert.

    1 in 10 Americans are employed by these firms. Default estimates are in the 50% range.

  • #2
    Re: Private Equity Crash Straight Ahead

    Yes. Makes sense. I call it the "Candy Bar Effect". A new manager comes into a K-Mart and has the candy bars moved from where they are now to someplace different. It doesn't matter where. When business improves even slightly them the manager can take credit because he moved the candy bars. He is the one that was the difference. If business doesn't improve he ignores his lack of contribution the next time he briefs.

    The whole freakin' economy is based on this kind of BS now. Obama's stimulus is exactly that.

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    • #3
      Re: Private Equity Crash Straight Ahead


      "And then finally, when there's nothing left and you can't borrow another buck from the bank or buy another case of booze, you bust the joint out. You light a match."

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      • #4
        Re: Private Equity Crash Straight Ahead

        Originally posted by don View Post
        Private equity firms buy undervalued or under appreciated companies, impose short-term improvements and sell them for a fast profit.
        Wrong.

        Private equity firms illegally naked short a properly valued company, by it cheap, then let it return to where it was or sell it off in parts.

        Your explanation assumes some MBAers at Blackrock know how to make "short-term improvements" - LOL.

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        • #5
          Re: Private Equity Crash Straight Ahead

          Originally posted by MulaMan View Post
          Wrong.

          Private equity firms illegally naked short a properly valued company, by it cheap, then let it return to where it was or sell it off in parts.

          Your explanation assumes some MBAers at Blackrock know how to make "short-term improvements" - LOL.
          That didn't float with me either. The text is from Fresh Air's online intro. The interview with the author was worth a listen.

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          • #6
            Re: Private Equity Crash Straight Ahead

            Originally posted by MulaMan View Post
            Wrong.

            Private equity firms illegally naked short a properly valued company, by it cheap, then let it return to where it was or sell it off in parts.

            Your explanation assumes some MBAers at Blackrock know how to make "short-term improvements" - LOL.
            Unless a prostitute makes them all soft and weak inside.

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