Beware of PE secondaries “rubbish” as dealflow rises, valuations drop

Investors in the private equity secondaries universe must be selective as more assets, including distressed assets, come to market and valuations seem set to head south.

Marleen Groen, chief executive of Greenpark Capital, recently told a gathering of Australian pension funds representing $450 billion in retirement assets that due diligence was more important now as more private equity asset holders sought a premature exit through the secondaries market.

“The name of the game for returns is to be very selective,” Groen said.

She said assets were still priced at September 2008 valuations, and that the information underlying them was often opaque.

Valuations were expected to be revised downwards in the next few months, she said.

Groen expected between US$100 billion and US$130 billion would be invested in the next two years, and that about US$30 billion of these assets would be unworkable.

Sponsored Content

“The real rubbish won’t be sold in this market; the supply of capital is not enough.

Most of the sellers coming to market were showing signs of liquidity stress.

“Quite frankly, why would you be selling in this market if you weren’t distressed? Major discounts are the only way that these people can make transactions.

“There are deals being done at negative pricing, where the seller… actually pays the buyer for the risk of taking on these obligations.”

She expected between 20 and 40 per cent of private equity managers would disappear, and advised investors to consider liquidating their older vintages.

“Older investors in private equity should consider selling-off older parts of their portfolio on which they have already earned a decent return, and within which the visibility is quite good.”

Secondaries originated from large leveraged buy-outs made in the last bull market were risky, as these deals were based on “excessive pricing and leverage that was dangerous”, and mid-market secondaries showed better deals.

“In the mid-market exits are being achieved even though banks have stopped lending.”

Groen claimed that US$1 trillion in assets had been committed to private equity worldwide.

In 2008, US$20 billion in dealflow entered the secondaries market.

Most of the assets on offer now were coming from the US market, she said.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Warren Buffett’s excellent adventure

'Youngster’ Warren Buffett (85) rebuffed risks from sugar and climate change as he toured the American economy with his ‘older’ offsider, Charlie Munger (92), presenting at the Berkshire Hathaway AGM .

Pay for performance

Pension fund executive pay varies widely around the globe, with differences based on internal management and alternatives exposures. Amanda White examines pension fund executive pay.

A long way to go

It’s all very well to have diversity, but most people lack the tools for how to get the best out of a diverse team. Instead the reverse is true and diversity can lead to an unlevel playing field.

Too much of a good thing

Experts at the Thinking Ahead Institute outline the pitfalls of implementing team diversity, , when too much diversity fails us, and how organisations can be champions for change.

Income the key dimension

Risk should be defined as the inability to meet retirement income goals, so investors and their managers should forget alpha and other “distractions”, according to David Booth.

Worlds colliding

The debate about the effect of pay inequality on both the financial and real-world markets is about to get a whole lot hotter this year.

Previous