2011年6月5日 星期日

Buyout Firms Seek New Horizons

C:\Documents

Bloomberg

By Cristina Alesci and Jason Kelly

Stephen A. Schwarzman, David M. Rubenstein, Henry R. Kravis, and George R. Roberts became billionaires by engineering leveraged buyouts. Now they're transforming their companies into asset managers that run everything from hedge funds to strip malls as fresh capital and takeover targets become scarce.

Schwarzman's Blackstone Group (BX), the biggest private equity firm, is earning twice as much from owning property, including office buildings in India and seniors communities in Oregon, as from buyouts. Kravis and Roberts's KKR (KKR) owns a stake in a 5,500-mile U.S. fuel pipeline and lends to distressed companies. "The large-cap leveraged buyout business has become mature," says Colin C. Blaydon, director of the Center for Private Equity & Entrepreneurship at Dartmouth College's Tuck School of Business. In the future, private equity firms will look "more like the large money-management enterprises, with a big emphasis on assets under management."

The firms have little choice if they want to grow. For one thing, the increase in the number of buyout funds—to 470 today from 60 in 1990—has made raising money harder. "As the business exploded, more and more people rushed into private equity, which made competition for money fierce," says Richard I. Beattie, chairman of law firm Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, who helped KKR with its $30 billion takeover of RJR Nabisco in 1989 and remains an adviser to many private equity firms.

Stock prices have doubled in a two-year rally, making takeover candidates more expensive. And while deal activity is increasing, private equity firms are encountering more competition from corporate buyers with lots of cash. Blackstone, which is raising a $15 billion fund, committed only $550 million to private equity deals in the first quarter.

Blackstone's largest investment in the last 12 months was the $9.4 billion deal to buy 593 U.S. shopping centers in 39 states from Australia's Centro Properties Group. It would be the largest cash purchase of real estate in the world since the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008, Schwarzman, 64, said during an April conference call with investors.

Co-founder Rubenstein has steered Washington-based Carlyle Group, ranked second by assets under management, into the fund-of-funds business by taking over AlpInvest, a Dutch company that spreads money for investors among buyout funds. Rubenstein, 61, also agreed to buy a majority stake in Claren Road Asset Management, a hedge fund that trades debt. "We're building new products and adding new geographies and people to give our clients more choice and asset-diversification options," he says.

KKR, created in 1976 by Kravis, Roberts, and Jerome Kohlberg, has ventured into underwriting stock and bond offerings, investing in infrastructure deals, making and buying loans, and, most recently, operating hedge funds.

Leon D. Black's Apollo Global Management, which completed a $565 million initial public offering in March, has been scouring European banks for what it calls "stranded assets," including $2 billion of nonperforming commercial loans, President Marc A. Spilker told investors on May 12. Another $240 million is earmarked for "longevity-based assets"—a bet on the value of life insurance policies Apollo is buying from banks.

These private equity managers are trying to boost returns by going where rivals can't because they lack the firepower, or by taking advantage of distressed sellers. "In virtually all recent transactions, Blackstone has faced limited competition due to the magnitude of capital required and the complexity of the transactions," Schwarzman told investors in April.

Even so, private equity firms may not find asset management and real estate as profitable as buyouts. Private equity firms typically collect a 1.5 percent to 2 percent fee on assets under management and incentive fees equal to 20 percent of any profit. While the new businesses may produce comparable management fees, they can offer little or no incentive fees.


View the original article here

沒有留言:

張貼留言