Private Equity Fire Sales Aren’t Here Yet. But They’re Probably Coming.

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by dealmaker, Mar 23, 2020.

  1. dealmaker

    dealmaker

    Private Equity Fire Sales Aren’t Here
    Yet. But They’re Probably Coming.



    As markets deteriorate, LPs prepare to sell off private investments to rebalance out-of-whack portfolios and raise cash.

    March 20, 2020

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    Illustration by II
    Investors in private equity are gearing up to liquidate alternative assets in preparation for the coronavirus-triggered market rout continuing.

    Limited partners are eyeing liquidation for a few reasons: portfolio liquidity, allocation rebalancing, and investment strategy shifts, according to Claire Commons, head of strategy at Palico, an online marketplace where investors can buy stakes in private equity fund secondhand.

    “We’re seeing that LPs are not panicked, but they are concerned,” Commons said by phone Wednesday. “They really want to be prepared.”

    Some are considering listing assets on the secondary market. Secondary buyouts have become an increasingly popular tool used by limited partners to liquidate their private equity investments earlier than they may have normally.

    According to Commons, as the stock market has crashed, some limited partners’ asset allocations may have gotten “out of whack.” As public equities’ asset values drop, their relative share in an institution’s portfolio also falls.

    “Should public markets go down, you’re going to be over-allocated to private equity,” Commons said. In the hopes of rebalancing their portfolio, some may sell off some of their private assets, she added.

    Many may simply need cash, and pronto. Still others may want to shift their investment strategy, selling off, say, European buyout funds to ramp up another kind of exposure.

    Why Bond ETFs Will
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    “With stocks and bonds, you can sell them pretty much on a daily basis,” Commons said. “It’s challenging to have active portfolio management within private equity.”

    Prior to the public market’s drop, many private assets were trading at or above par value, which was a relatively new phenomenon.

    According to Commons, secondary funds have roughly $150 billion in committed capital to deploy. If private market valuations change the way public equities have, secondaries should start trading below par.

    “The public markets react a lot faster than the private markets, but I wouldn’t be surprised to see some pricing softening in private markets,” Commons said.

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    But, she added, limited partners should manage their expectations when it comes to asset pricing.

    “You can’t anchor your expectations, especially now, from prior statements,” Commons said. “Buyers are going to be doing much more bottom-up asset-by-asset valuation with a huge amount of stress testing.”

    https://www.institutionalinvestor.c...les Arent Here Yet But Theyre Probably Coming
     
  2. Specterx

    Specterx

    Mass "fire sale" liquidations would be ironic, given that the PE space is supposed to be about committing capital for the long term and avoiding day-to-day quotational risk - not to mention that PE funds are supposedly sitting on mountains of dry powder.
     
    trader99, comagnum and jys78 like this.
  3. S2007S

    S2007S

    Well at the rate the dow is falling there are about 3 weeks before we go straight to ZEROOOOO!!!
     
    jys78 likes this.
  4. Sig

    Sig

    Depends what kind of PE you are, but if you're doing LBOs on consumer space companies, Golden Gate Capital comes to mind as a good example, then your portfolio companies (Red Lobster anyone?) are getting killed at the moment regardless of your investment timeline.