The document discusses private equity investing and different private equity investment strategies. It describes leveraged buyouts which focus on mature companies, and venture capital which focuses on high growth companies and relies more on equity financing. Venture capital is divided into early stage and late stage investments. Other strategies discussed include special situations, mezzanine financing, and fund of funds. Private equity funds are typically structured as limited partnerships with investors as limited partners and fund managers as general partners.
The document discusses private equity investing and different private equity investment strategies. It describes leveraged buyouts which focus on mature companies, and venture capital which focuses on high growth companies and relies more on equity financing. Venture capital is divided into early stage and late stage investments. Other strategies discussed include special situations, mezzanine financing, and fund of funds. Private equity funds are typically structured as limited partnerships with investors as limited partners and fund managers as general partners.
The document discusses private equity investing and different private equity investment strategies. It describes leveraged buyouts which focus on mature companies, and venture capital which focuses on high growth companies and relies more on equity financing. Venture capital is divided into early stage and late stage investments. Other strategies discussed include special situations, mezzanine financing, and fund of funds. Private equity funds are typically structured as limited partnerships with investors as limited partners and fund managers as general partners.
The document discusses private equity investing and different private equity investment strategies. It describes leveraged buyouts which focus on mature companies, and venture capital which focuses on high growth companies and relies more on equity financing. Venture capital is divided into early stage and late stage investments. Other strategies discussed include special situations, mezzanine financing, and fund of funds. Private equity funds are typically structured as limited partnerships with investors as limited partners and fund managers as general partners.
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Private Equity Investing
Mehmet I. Budak 2 What is Private Equity? Investment strategy that involves the purchase of equity or equity linked securities in a company Investment is made through a negotiated process By sophisticated investors with financial and operating expertise The goal is to acquire undervalued or promising assets and realize profits in 3-5 years after the acquisition Information asymmetry and inefficiencies are important factors 3 Alternative Investments 4 Private Equity Investment Strategies Leveraged Buyouts Venture Capital (early vs. late stage) Special Situations (i.e. distressed) Mezzanine Secondary Purchases Fund of Funds 5 Leveraged Buyouts Established firms with track records, stable cash flows and stable growth rates Annual revenues of $25 - $500 million Typically in basic retail, transportation and manufacturing industries Typically have assets to borrow against and access to bank loans Seek private equity to effect a change in ownership, finance an expansion or restructure 6 Venture Capital - Early Stage Firms with substantial risk of failure - business models and marketing approach are yet to be proved Small and illiquid investments with size of $500k - $2 million The smallest type is the entrepreneur who needs the financing to conduct initial research and development The most mature type are those firms that are starting to turn profits but need capital for expansion Angel capital is an important source of funding 7 Venture Capital - Late Stage Firms with more certain business models Proven technology and market Profitable and need expansion capital General size of $2 - $15 million IPO or Sale expected/feasible in near term Original investors may achieve some liquidity Because the risk is generally lower and the liquidity higher, later-stage investments require lower returns than early-stage investments 8 Leveraged Buyouts vs. Venture Capital Buyouts focus on mature companies with stable or sustainable growth profile Buyouts rely heavily on debt financing to finance most of the purchase price Venture Capital focus on high growth industries with riskier investment profile than buyouts Venture Capital relies heavily on equity financing and has higher return targets than buyouts 9 Special Situations Investment is supplied by specialized Turnaround Funds (TF) for target firms that have defaulted on their outstanding loans TFs receive controlling interests, with former owners making up the minority interest TFs renegotiates terms with existing lenders, offering to restructure or pay off loans at a discount TFs also deliver expertise to find new markets or partners for the firms products, cut costs, change or improve the current management 10 Fund of Funds Investing directly in PE funds can be difficult for individual investors and small institutions Relatively high investment minimums may disqualify some of the small investors Information on PE managers is difficult to locate Gaining access to top PE funds can be difficult due to high investor demand Fund of Funds co-mingles the investments of small investors into a single pool and then assembles a portfolio of PE funds 11 How are PE Funds Structured? Private limited partnerships Individual managers are the General Partner (GP) Providers of capital (pensions, insurance companies, wealthy people) are Limited Partners (LPs) Partnerships have 10-year life with +1+1 extension 4-6 year investment period 1-2% annual management fee Profits split 80-20, after reaching hurdle return level for LPs LPs need to fund within 2-3 weeks of capital call Penalties for failure to fund by LPs IRRs depend on when money is transferred by LPs 12 General Partners Key Activities Selecting investments Obtaining access to high quality deal flow Sorting and evaluating large amount of information Structuring investments Designing transactions Monitoring investments Providing strategic, operational and financial assistance to portfolio companies Exiting investments IPO, Sale or Recapitalization 13 Private Equity Partnerships and Fundraising 14 Private Equity Market - Investors Public and corporate pension funds, endowments, foundations, wealthy families, insurance companies, foreign investors and others Investors expect to receive higher risk- adjusted returns on private equity than other investments Potential benefits of diversification Advantage of economies of scope between private equity investing and investors other activities 15 Private Equity Market - Intermediaries ~ 80% of PE investments flow through specialized intermediaries, which are limited partnerships Intermediaries provide expertise in selecting, structuring, and managing private equity investments Intermediaries not organized as LPs play a less significant role today in the private equity market SBICs owned by banks and VC subsidiaries of non-financial corporations mostly invest their corporate parents capital 16 Private Equity Market - Issuers Vary in size and their reasons for raising capital Young firms that are developing innovative technologies Middle market companies that are stable, profitable and need private equity to expand or restructure Going private transactions for public companies PIPE (Private Investment in Public Equity) provides financing without registration costs/ disclosures associated with public offerings 17 How are PE Funds Structured? Limited Partners Investors with money Insurance companies, pension funds, banks, and high net worth individuals Investors commit a certain amount to the fund They have no other active role in the fund and no liability beyond their commitments One General Partner Managers of money Manages the investments via a management company Receives management fee (typically 2%) on commitments Receives carried interest in the profits 18 How are PE Funds Structured? Contractually fixed lifetime (10-12 years) Capital is invested during the first 4-6 years Thereafter, investments are managed and liquidated Distributions are made to the limited partners in the forms of cash or securities General Partner typically raises a new fund when the investment phase for the existing fund has been completed (=> 80%) Each fund partnership is legally separate and is managed independently of other fund partnerships (i.e KKR I vs. KKR II) 19 Partnership Terms - Example Target Fund Size $1 billion Minimum Commitment $10 million Gross Target Return 25% Management Fee 2% Carried Interest 80% - 20% Commitment Period 5 years Fund Term 10 years +1+1 20 Relationship Between LPs and GPs LPs delegate significant responsibilities to GPs Resolution of potential conflict of interests lies in the structure of the partnership agreement Partnerships have finite lives To remain in business, GPs regularly raise new funds - easier for reputable firms with good record GP compensation is closely linked to the fund returns 21 Partnership Covenants The objective is to limit excessive risk taking by GPs Covenants usually set limits on the % of the partnerships capital that may be invested in a single firm Covenants may preclude investments in publicly traded and foreign securities, derivatives and other private equity funds, etc Covenants usually require that cash from sale of portfolio assets be immediately distributed to LPs LPs usually limit such deal fees or require that deal fees be offset against management fees Return hurdle rates for LPs 22 Evaluating General Partners Track record, relevancy of past experience Generation of adequate deal flow Sound investment decision-making processes Ability to achieve successful exits / liquidity Advantages vs. similarly focused funds Sufficiency of resources Meaningful commitment of time Cohesiveness and sustainability of team Succession planning 23 Co-investment By LPs Co-investments are direct investments in portfolio companies by LPs alongside private equity partnerships Usually, LPs acquire the securities on the same terms as the partnership but pay no management fee or carried interest Co-investment opportunities arise when GPs need additional equity financing to close a deal Some institutional investors see co-investing as an opportunity to acquire expertise in private equity investing For GPs, LPs that stand ready to co-invest represent a flexible source of funds for closing deals 24 Transaction Origination 25 Deal Flow Deal flow, access to high quality investment opportunities, is absolutely crucial GPs rely on relationships with third parties and industry contacts for deal flow generation The greater the deal flow, the higher the likelihood of identifying an attractive opportunity Proprietary deals are more attractive than deals brought by agents or intermediaries Less competition means lower purchase price Lower purchase price means higher IRRs 26 Origination Investment banks, consultants, lawyers and industry contacts introduce potential opportunities Preliminary opportunity analysis will be performed relatively quickly Initial decision is quickly made whether a PE firm would be interested in the opportunity PE firms have different investment strategies and views of the world If interested, PE firms would sign Confidentiality Agreement to begin evaluating the opportunity 27 Screening of Deals Deal screening is art and science PE firms receive many investment proposals in a year Proposals are first screened to eliminate those that are clearly fail to meet investment criteria Specialization on a specific industry or geography reduces the number of investment opportunities considered Initial review takes a 1 2 days and results in the rejection of ~ 90% of proposals received by a PE firm Surviving proposals then become subject to a secondary review after the signing of a Confidentiality Agreement Proposals that survive the preliminary and secondary reviews become the subject of a comprehensive due diligence process 28 Non-Binding Indications of Interest Commonly referred to as 1st round bid Give sellers a perspective on the level of buyer interest and the valuation parameters buyers are likely to assume Indication of interest subject to: Completion of business, legal, accounting and environmental due diligence Negotiation and execution of documents Receipt of necessary approvals Negotiation of employment agreements with key management 29 Leveraged Buyouts 30 What is an LBO? Acquisition of a company where a PE firm uses cash equity and debt to fund the purchase price PE firm injects equity into a new shell company (NewCo), which borrows debt and simultaneously acquires the target PE firm contributes capital, operating and financial expertise, strategic insight, contacts and management talent Management ownership increases, creating higher incentives to improve operations and deliver results Debt is repaid by the operating cash flows or by the sale of non-core assets of the acquired business LBO is similar to buying and renting out a house - the rent cash flows to pay down the mortgage debt 31 Typical LBO Structure Ownership Purchase price Equity investment Bonds Bank loan NewCo acquires Target Acquiror (LBO firm) Banks Current Owners Bond Holders NewCo Target 32 Typical LBO Structure Varies over time with market conditions Sources of financing 40 50% senior bank debt (5-7 years) 20 30% subordinated debt (8-12 years) 20 40% common equity Bank debt is secured from receivables, inventory and PP&E 33 Good LBO Candidates History of consistent profitability Predictable cash flows to service debt Availability of excess cash Easily separable assets or businesses Strong management team Strong brands and market position Industry with barriers to entry Little danger from disruptive changes (technology, regulatory, etc.) Visible/feasible exit strategy (IPO or M&A) 34 Value Creation Strategic Vision, growth initiatives, add-on acquisitions, exit Operational Sales, costs, assets Organizational Processes, structure, systems, skills Financial Balance sheet, tax structure, capitalization Expansion in valuation multiples Advantages of being private 35 How Do PE Firms Create Value? Minimize purchase price Maximize leverage Minimize liabilities purchased Manage transaction costs Improve business operations Maximize tax efficiency Optimize exit 36 Minimize Purchase Price Avoid competition Auction process vs. proprietary deal Maintain price discipline Avoid deal fever Maximize deductions from headline price Earn outs Liabilities pension, legal, other 37 Maximize Leverage Maintain competitive process among banks willing to fund the transaction Choose right financing structure Balance of risk, flexibility and interest cost Seller notes and staple financing Deeply subordinate and at attractive terms Partner with co-investors 38 Minimize Liabilities Purchased Detailed due diligence Legal Financial Accounting Environmental Tough negotiations Reps and Warranties 39 Transaction Costs and Taxation Minimize transaction costs Internal costs Aborted deal costs Maximize tax efficiency Increase interest tax shield Increase depreciation Increase tax deductible amortization 40 Improve Business Operations Top line growth New markets, partners Products Margin improvement COGS SG&A 41 Exit Difficult to predict future business cycles and market conditions Prepare an exit strategy and groom the business for that exit Trade sale or M&A clean cash exit IPO long process, company needs to be above a certain size, lock-up restrictions Leveraged recapitalization allows sponsor to remove invested capital prior to ultimate exit, increases IRR and hedges against poor exit Secondary buyout selling to another sponsor 42 Sources and Uses of Funds SOURCES USES New Revolver (L + 275 bps) $ 25.0 Purchase Price of Equity $ 250.0 New Term Loan A (L + 275 bps) 150.0 Refinance Existing Debt 630.0 New Term Loan B (L + 325 bps) 200.0 Assume Capital Leases 25.0 Assume Capital Leases 25.0 Transaction Costs 20.0 Total Senior Debt 400.0 New Senior Subordinated Notes (12%) 250.0 Total Debt 650.0 New PIK Preferred / Seller Paper (14%) 75.0 Acquirors Equity / Strategic Cash 200.0 Total Sources $925.0 Total Uses $925.0 43 Sources of Funds Equity New equity injection from LBO sponsor Potential equity contribution from existing management Potential continuing equity investment by existing shareholders (rollover) Equity from a strategic partner Debt Bank debt (senior debt) High yield debt (subordinated debt) Mezzanine securities Can be structured to be more debt-like or more equity- like depending on the situation 44 Bank Debt Senior secured (most senior debt) Flexible, interest rate is floating Matures before other debt classes, amortizing Typically callable/prepayable at par Quarterly interest payments Maintenance covenants Structured at the operating company level Underwritten via syndication Diligence, commitment, launch, syndicate, fund 45 Bank Debt Revolving Credit Facilities vs. Term loans Revolvers allow multiple drawings for working capital and general corporate needs Term loans funded at closing Pro Rata facilities Revolver and Term Loan A held by commercial banks Buy and hold mentality, shrinking segment Institutional tranches Consist of Term Loans B, C or D- held by insurance companies, CLOs and CDOs, growing segment Purely transactional, liquidity in the secondary market Minimal front-end amortization 46 High Yield Bond Debt Usually subordinated and/or unsecured Interest rate is fixed, maturity of 8-10 years Bullet maturity after full bank debt amortization Usually not callable at par in early years, typically 1-5 years Structured at the operating company level Publicly quoted security Incurrence covenants Diligence, document, roadshow, price and fund 47 Mezzanine Debt Subordinated to bank debt and high yield bonds Flexible, typically floating interest rate Non-amortizing, bullet maturity typically after 10 years Cash & PIK coupon payment further enhanced with equity warrants PIK component can eat into equity Structurally subordinated at the holding company level Incurrence covenants 48 Due Diligence 49 Due Diligence Objective Validate business concept Verify market Appraise management Validate forecasts Valuation Diligence establishes basis for valuation, price and negotiation Diligence is expensive and time consuming Diligence strategy Preliminary evaluation to identify deal-breakers before spending time and money on detailed due diligence 50 Key Topics for Due Diligence Business concept, opportunity Market Competition Customers Products Management Financials Returns 51 Business Concept, Opportunity What is the concept/opportunity? Is the opportunity sustainable? Potential size of the opportunity? How can the target company capitalize on the opportunity? Is the proposed plan/strategy realistic? How does the target business fit to its markets and region? Why are we so smart or lucky? 52 Market Market characteristics, segments, size, growth, cyclicality, key metrics, demographics? Projected market share and sales volume? Low barriers to entry into the market? Is targets business model sustainable? How will the business be perceived by customers? Regulatory issues? 53 Competition Who are the direct competitors? Relative size, scope, cost basis, brands and market share? What are the key factors/levers of competition in the industry? How is targets business strategy different than competitors? What are targets competitive advantages? What are the targets competitive disadvantages? Threat from potential new entrants? 54 Customers Who are the customers? Current and future customer base? What specific market and customer needs does the target business serve? How do customers make their purchase decisions? Key criteria? Customer satisfaction and retention? Does the projected number of customers or sales make sense? Realistic? How will the target acquire new customers? 55 Products Product life cycle, penetration trends? Product pricing? Product profitability? Productivity versus competition? Maintain or jettison certain products? Plant consolidation? Inventory optimization? CAPEX requirements? Development plans? 56 Management Competent? Experienced? Cohesive? Strategic? Flexible? Incentivized? Proactive? Realistic? 57 Financials What is the optimal capital structure? Are revenue and cost projections comprehensive, realistic, reasonable? What are the underlying business assumptions of the projections? Impact of various business case scenarios? How does cash flow in this business? How much capital investment needed? When? Correct accounting treatment? What are the key sensitivities? 58 Confirming Value Financial and accounting diligence is primarily focused on drilling into the basic components of valuation Recurring EBITDA (adjust for extraordinary items) CAPEX Working Capital Cash Flow Multiple 59 Recurring EBITDA General issues exclusions, accounting changes, pro forma adjustments Revenue components, method of recognition, customers, customer arrangements, pricing/volume Margins components of cost of sales, gross margin trends Reserves under/over statement of profits Compensation benefits, headcount needs, transition issues, bonus SG&A components, trends, discretionary costs, fixed vs. variable, cost savings Other restructurings, acquisitions, contingencies 60 CAPEX Determine normalized annual CAPEX Maintenance or mandatory CAPEX Determine expansion CAPEX Discretionary CAPEX CAPEX between signing and closing of transaction reduce net cash position Important to have correct CAPEX assumptions in calculating exit value 61 Working Capital Analyze working capital cycle Components of B/S accounts Needs and trends Savings opportunities Potential closing balance sheet issues Important to have correct working capital assumptions in calculating exit value 62 Legal Due Diligence Conducted in tandem with business, financial and accounting due diligence Structure the transaction in the most tax efficient manner Understand the legal aspects of targets business and assets being acquired Identify and evaluate liabilities Materials are typically made available for review in a data room 63 What Is a Bad Deal? No real competitive advantage of PE firm Long list of things that have to go right to make the deal work Build it and they will come is not a good business strategy Aggressive estimates of future growth Employing the wrong management team True downside case is not adequately evaluated 64 Transaction Structuring and Documentation 65 Term Sheets Preliminary documents designed to provide a framework for negotiations between investors and the target company Provides collective understanding of the proposed transaction, basic terms and conditions Generally focuses on the targets valuation and the conditions under which investors agree to provide financing Term sheet eventually transforms into a formal agreement known as the Purchase Agreement, which is a legal document that details who is buying what from whom at what price when 66 Key Sections of Term Sheets Acquirer Target Valuation Structure of acquisition Management compensation Debt financing Board of directors Rights Transaction fees Management fees 67 Purchase Agreement Transaction terms and structure Description of asset sold Calculation of purchase price Closing date Reps and Warranties buyer and seller Conditions to closing seller Conditions to closing buyer Conditions for termination 68 Purchase Agreement Clarity regarding key financial and deal terms Business/assets being acquired and the liabilities being assumed Arrangements for asset sharing going forward Protecting the acquirer from contingent or undisclosed liabilities Locking up the target, no shopping of the deal Representations and Warranties verification of factual matters covered during the due diligence Pre-closing operations Closing conditions fiduciary outs, break up fee Purchase price adjustments post closing adjustment 69 Representations and Warranties Statement of fact at a particular point in time Purpose Provides basis for refusal to close the transaction if untrue (pre-close) Provides basis for post-closing indemnification for damages if untrue (post-close) Mainly refers to areas covered in due diligence Financial statements, liabilities, contracts, real estate, litigation, taxes Both buyer and seller gives Reps & Warranties Buyers objective understand what I am buying Sellers objective increase certainty of closing 70 Covenants Agreements to act or refrain from acting in the future Positive vs. Negative covenants Necessary because signing and closing are not simultaneous Pre-closing covenants Largely to the benefit of buyer Objective is to preserve the asset to be purchased and ensure closing occurs Post-closing covenants To the benefit of seller Objective is to protect certain interests once seller no longer owns the business 71 Covenants Pre-closing Operations in the ordinary course of business No solicitation of proposals from competing buyers No dividends and distributions No issuance of equity or incurrence of debt No acquisitions and divestitures No execution of significant contracts No change in accounting practices Post-closing No changes to compensation No hiring or firing of key management employees 72 Closing Conditions Transaction will not close until all conditions are satisfied Representations and warranties are true Absence of material adverse change in the business Excludes general economic or industry conditions, stock price movements, failure to meet forecasts, matters known to buyer Receipt of required government approvals and major third party consents Debt financing available on terms and conditions set forth in commitment letters Termination is cessation of both parties obligations Drop dead date financing and regulatory Breaches - break up fee ~5% Fiduciary out Buyers objective to be able to walk away if anything major is wrong Sellers objective to have some certainty that transaction will close if things are in reasonable order 73 Deal Process Inside the PE Firm Initial screening of deals Heads up memorandum Non-binding indications / term sheets Detailed due diligence and evaluation Formal and detailed presentation to the investment committee Final approval and funding 74 Heads Up Memo Why is the company being sold? What is the investment thesis? How does the opportunity fit with the PE firms investment strategy and skill base? What are the size, structure and timing of the investment? What is the PE firms edge in the process? What is the due diligence road map? How will the PE firm exit the investment? What are the expected returns and key assumptions driving the projections? 75 Formal Investment Committee Memo Analysis of the deal opportunity, the business, the transaction, the process, industry trends, due diligence results Detailed discussion of risks and opportunities Detailed analysis of operating and financial projections Detailed scenario analysis and projected returns Key questions to answer: Why do we want to do this deal? What is our edge? What value do we bring to this deal? Who is the competition? How and when will we exit? Impact of this deal on the rest of the portfolio? 76 Portfolio Company Monitoring 77 Portfolio Company Life Year 1 Figure out what you just bought Fix problems, focus on 2-3 key areas to improve Assess and change out management Years 2-3 Strategic Plan and Execution Develop strategic business plan Make investments, pursue acquisitions Execute plan Pay down debt Year 4-5 Prepare for Exit Windows dressing, clean up Sell on good performance 78 Portfolio Monitoring Takes place at least quarterly Candid and open discussion on the status of each investment Progress of investment thesis Value already created Problems experienced Changes needed to the game plan Basis for valuation Exit planning and timing 79 Portfolio Monitoring Information gathering is crucial Board seats provide meaningful access Monthly financial and operational statistics are provided to PE investors Regular interaction (weekly/monthly conference calls) with management Weekly PE firmwide meetings Quarterly MD&A write-ups from portfolio companies Annual audit reports 80 Portfolio Company Assistance Strategic and operational advice Financial engineering expertise Recruitment of top management and board members Leveraging industry contacts for identifying future partners, markets Revenue growth Gross margin improvement Operating expense reduction Cash flow improvement Crisis management Corporate governance Exit preparation Degree of involvement varies with type of investment 81 Mechanisms of Control Board Representation GPs are extremely influential and effective outside directors GPs have the resources and staff to monitor portfolio companies Allocation of Voting Rights GP investment is large enough to achieve majority ownership In some situations, GPs may obtain voting control even if they are not majority shareholders In general, a GPs voting rights do not depend on the type of stock issued. For example, holders of convertible preferred stock may be allowed to vote their shares on an as converted basis Control of Access to Additional Financing Venture Capital is provided in several rounds Influence of original investor is high on new GPs willingness to participate in subsequent rounds 82 Best Practices Interact regularly with the management and gather timely information Focus on top 2-3 priorities and deliver strategic and operational assistance Evaluate progress made vs. plan Identify problems early Adjust game plan as needed Value portfolio companies conservatively Prepare for exit at least one year in advance 83 Exit 84 Exit Limited partnerships must be dissolved within a certain time as they need to return capital to LPs Exit = Monetization and realization of paper profits Exit requires advanced planning and preparation Sale IPO Recapitalization 85 Exit Planning Need to forecast the evolution of the business Closely follow macro trends in the industry Who are the likely buyers? Strategics vs. financial buyers Foreigners vs. local buyers Exit preparation takes time Execute strategy and hit the budget forecasts Develop and prepare the management team Establish a clean track record (audits) Establish a reputable and competent board 86 M&A Exit Advantages Buyers usually pay a premium Clean exit with greater certainty Cheaper than IPO Faster and simpler than IPO Convince one buyer vs. the whole market Disadvantages May not be welcomed by the management sale or merger imply reduced independence Buyer appetite can be unpredictable 87 M&A Sellside Process Investment bank (target advisor) due diligence Investment bank (target advisor) writes selling memo Narrow the universe of potential buyers and place initial calls into buyers Send and negotiate confidentiality agreements Send preliminary bid letters Analyze preliminary bids Create management presentations Assemble data room Buyer due diligence Send final bid letter Analyze final bids Negotiate key terms Contract negotiations and documentation Transaction announcement 88 IPO Exit Advantages Prestige of becoming a publicly traded company Currency for future M&A activity Increased visibility for the company Preservers a companys independence and provides continued access to capital Disadvantages Not an immediate, clean liquidity event for investors Long and time-consuming Distraction for management Expensive process Information disclosure requirements Lock ups 89 IPO Process 1. Due Diligence and Drafting Meetings with senior management, iterative drafting of registration statement (Business Overview, Risk Factors, Financials, MD&A) 2. Initial Filing with SEC Generally accessible to the public and does not include the expected share price range for the offering 3. Structuring and Valuation Selecting co-managers, setting the initial filing range that serves as a valuation guideline for investors during the marketing process 4. Prospectus Distribution SEC gives comments on each draft of registration statement, the preliminary Prospectus is mailed broadly to potential investors 5. Salesforce Education On the companys story before marketing to potential investing clients, management dry runs 6. Targeting Investors Identification of best potential buyers, determine anchor buyers based on their current holdings of stock, one-on-one meetings 90 IPO Process 7. Syndication The lead underwriter takes the primary responsibility for this, syndicate members underwrite a fixed amount of stock and may be given additional allotments 8. Roadshow and Bookbuilding Schedule of meetings with investors in key cities around the world, lasts 2-3 weeks, roadshow team makes formal presentations to investors at these meetings, key investors are met in a one-on-one format, smaller investors are accommodated in a group In tandem with the marketing effort, the bookbuilding process begins, investors submit indications of interest for shares in the IPO, the lead managers collect these orders and build a book of demand over the course of the marketing period, a critical component is the collection of qualitative feedback on the orders in the book 9. Pricing and Allocation The quality of the book and aftermarket intentions of investors are critical, share performance in the aftermarket is important, allocations to institutional and retail investors 10. Aftermarket Balance supply and demand in the aftermarket, over-allotment option, on-going research coverage (after 25 days) and trading support 91 Recapitalization Usually, the acquired company is highly levered at the beginning Over time, the company pays off debt with cash flows from its operations This creates additional capacity to add more debt 1-3 years after the acquisition When additional debt is issued, excess cash is dividended out to the equity investors Investors achieve partial monetization Refinancing a mortgage is effectively a recapitalization 92 Capital Distribution to LPs Once an investment is monetized, the profits will be divided between LPs and GPs according to the partnership agreement 80% / 20% is usually the norm 80% to the LPs 20% to the GPs A minimum return hurdle % for LPs may have to be cleared before GPs can claim their share of profits (I.e. 8%) Clawback provision High returns make a strong track record which in turn makes future fundraising easier 93 Other Topics 94 Business Plan Identify a business need or niche and demonstrate its feasibility Analyze a product within the context of market and customer Evaluate the viability of a technology Describe major goals, objectives, and vision for 1 year, 3 years and 5 years Assess ability of management to execute Provide detailed financial projections 95 Business Plan Key Sections Concept/Opportunity Strategy Operations Markets Customers Products Competition Risks Implementation 96 Concept/Opportunity Always stated within the context of an existing or projected market Translate concept into terms that investors can understand Clearly highlight which market needs will be filled or issues will be addressed Have comprehensive knowledge of the competitive environment and the potential reactions from competitors Analyze the current and future customer base in detail 97 Raising Money The process of raising money may have significant costs Time Opportunity cost of distraction Significant amount of questions and information requests Impact on the organization (I.e. uncertainty) Direct expenses travel, legal and accounting May be beneficial to hire reputable advisors with relevant past fundraising experience and track record 98 Presenting to Private Equity Firms Identify relevant PE firms May make sense to use advisors Most effective if someone credible refers you to the PE firm Do your research in advance At the initial meeting, impress them and capture their interest PE firms time is the biggest asset 99 Questions in PE Minds Who are these people? Do they fit the way we do business? What is the value and appeal of this business? Will there be enough customer demand for its products? What can go wrong with this company? What needs to be accomplished to justify this valuation? What are the key trends in the industry and sector? How dependent is the value of this company on the overall performance of the sector or industry? What is the likely response from competition? Do they have the right experience and skills to deliver? Do they have a realistic, relevant and flexible strategy? What are the exit implications? IPO and M&A market trends? Can we/they win? 100 Developing Economies Need Capital Strategic vision Growth Credibility Global best practices Investor contacts Management talent 101 Private Equity Provides. Access to long-term financing GPs and LPs with significant investing experience around the globe Valuable strategic insights and operational expertise Significant financial discipline Substantial credibility and visibility to target company and the country Best practices to pursue profitable growth 102 Positive Impact of Private Equity A long-term support to those companies with the potential of success and sustainability Builds and grows business faster than they otherwise would Encourages entrepreneurial spirit, technological advancement and job creation Crucial to the existence, feasibility and success of businesses in the seed/start-up and expansion stages Teaches discipline of the buyside 103 Priorities for Private Equity Promote entrepreneurial environment and increase incentives for entrepreneurial investments Facilitate private equity fund formation Develop long-term capital sources Incorporate private equity needs and perspectives into policy-making 104 Entrepreneurial Environment Minimum regulation and bureaucracy Simplified requirements of company formation Support for private equity and entrepreneurial education Favorable tax regime capital gains Equity and options ownership Awareness of private equity as engine of growth and value creation 105 Long-Term Capital Sources Access to long-term funding is essential for PE firms Development of pension funds and relevant regulatory regime is a critical step U.S. example Pension funds should be allowed to invest in private equity Unrestricted movement of capital is a must- have for private equity industry 106 Rules for Private Equity Investing 1. Develop your own idea of what a business is worth 2. Avoid auctions 3. Pick your spots 4. Approach each potential transaction with overwhelming force 5. Follow the cash 6. Get timely help from experts, advisors 7. Keep your emotions in check (deal fever) 8. Develop trust with your team and managers 9. Make sure acquired company managers concentrate on the few vital objectives 10. When management team is not working, change them as soon as possible