Private Equity Healthcare Amicas

Private Equity Amicas Buyout

Thomas Bravo Buys Health Care Firm Amicas for $217m


If there is one sign of life in private equity it is fittingly in the health care and medical technology industries.  Today it was announced that Amicas has agreed to an offer by private equity firm Thomas Bravo for $217 million.  According to Amicas' CEO, the purchase by Thomas Bravo will give Amicas "additional capital and operational expertise" to expand.  Amicas is a producer of radiology, medical-imaging and information management products.  The firm's stock has been steadily increasing in value in 2009 after a steep drop last year.  
The private-equity industry has been relatively quiet on the acquisition front, but deal activity has been picking up in recent weeks as stocks continue to move higher and credit markets ease.
Amicas Chairman and Chief Executive Stephen Kahane said Monday the buyout will provide the maker of radiology, medical-imaging and information-management products with "additional capital and operational expertise" that will help it to grow.
Thoma Bravo will pay $5.35 for each share, 21% above Thursday's closing price. Shareholders still must approve the deal, which is expected to close in the first quarter.
Earlier this year, Amicas bought hospital technology company Emageon Inc. for about $39 million.
Amicas' stock has risen steadily in 2009, more than doubling in value, as the company has reported strong growth and boosted expectations. Shares hit a seven-year low late last year. Source



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Tags: Amicas, Thomas Bravo, Amicas private equity funding, Amicas takeover, purchase, funding, financing, funds, management, Thomas Bravo Private Equity

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Private Equity Designation Program

Private Equity Designation Program

Introduction to the Private Equity Designation Program



Since I began writing at PrivateEquityBlogger.com I have been planning on launching a program for educating private equity professionals.  I, along with a team of professionals, am working to build this program and make it into a top program for educating and preparing professionals for working in private equity.   The following is a brief introduction to the program:

What is this designation?

The certification program will be a six month long self-study designation, where professionals use our study guide, assigned readings, article resources, and multimedia resources to prepare for a challenging comprehensive examination.  This examination helps others see that a third party has verified a professional's knowledge in the area of private equity.

The course will be advised by current private equity professionals and managers and the curriculum is conceived by a professional currently working in finance with alternative investments funds.  Our goal is to better prepare those who enroll in areas of due diligence, fund management, fund marketing and general private equity industry knowledge.

Who Should Enroll in the certification program?

This certification and training program is designed to include analysts, due diligence professionals, private equity fund managers, attorneys, accountants, recruiters and marketing/sales professionals.

Readers of this blog should consider enrolling in the program in order to gain a greater understanding of the industry and what it is like to work for a private equity firm.  I will update this blog with more information on the program as it gets closer to launch. 




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Most Active Venture Capital Firms

Most Active Venture Capital Firms

10 Most Active Venture Capital Firms of the Decade

It's about that time, when we all look back on the decade and reflect so here is the first of a couple posts on this decade and 2009.  Venture capital firms entered the decade riding the high returns of the dot-com era but now firms are struggling with unimpressive returns, nervous investors, a tough market for IPOs, and new regulation, among other challenges. In the last ten years venture capital firms have invested in some 16,000 American businesses with a range of brilliant successes and miserable failures. It's been an interesting decade for venture capitalists, to say the least.

Here is a great list based on the VentureXpert database of the most active venture capital firms of the last decade.
  1. Intel Capital
  2. JP Morgan Partners
  3. New Enterprise Associates
  4. Draper Fisher Jurvetson
  5. Sequoia Capital
  6. Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers
  7. Bessemer Venture Partners
  8. US Venture Partners
  9. Goldman Sachs
  10. Venrock

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Market Capitalization

Market Capitalization

What is Market Capitalization | Definition


This blog is an educational resource for those wanting to learn more about the private equity industry so from time to time I will offer definitions and explanations of industry concepts. 

One way to measure the value of a company which is typically used by private equity firms is the target company's market capitalization, also known as market cap.  This number is a calculation of the number of shares available to the public multiplied by the market price per share. 

Market capitalization is an important consideration in mergers and acquisitions because it gives the buyer an estimate of what to bid.  A buyer should expect to pay a premium on the market capitalization so this number is more of a minimum price but you will probably have to pay a higher price to gain a majority interest in the firm.  In some cases stockholders may be eager to unload their shares but the market is too thin, in this situation private buyers can get a lower price than what the market capitalization would suggest.

Valuation of the firm should not rely solely on its market capitalization, but also other factors such as quality of management, long-term growth potential, and how much debt the firm has.  I hope this has answered the question what is market capitalization?

Market Capitalization calculation:  

(total number of shares outstanding) X (the current share of the company's stock)

For a great explanation of market capitalization read Private Equity: Transforming a Public Corporation to Increase Value



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Sub-Saharan Africa Private Equity

Sub-Saharan Africa Private Equity

CDC Invests $100m to Private Equity in Sub-Saharan Africa


Good news for emerging private equity funds in Africa, the CDC is committing more than $100 million to two funds focused in sub-Saharan Africa.  This is a pretty strong vote of confidence in the region's potential from the UK's development finance institution.  CDC is investing $75 million with Helios Investors and roughly $28 million to Development Partners International.

CDC is investing in the Helios Investors II fund, which is aiming to raise $600 million and will invest in ICT, financial services, infrastructure, consumer products and agribusiness.
CDC has already invested $50 million in Helios Investors I.
CDC is also investing in Development Partners' African Development Partners fund, which has raised 270 million euros and will invest in telecoms, technology, financial services, healthcare, retail and leisure, property development and utilities.
The latter fund will have particular emphasis on post-conflict, newly-liberalised countries like Rwanda and Angola, CDC said.
The investments bring CDC's total commitment in Africa-focussed funds in 2009 to over $150 million.
As the global economy emerges from financial crisis, investors are noting an upturn in African private equity investment.  Source


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Blackstone Travelport IPO

Blackstone Travelport IPO

Blackstone Considering $3.2 Billion Travelport IPO


Blackstone Group's travel reservation company is planning a $3.2 billion initial public offering in London as early as February.  The revival of the S&P has given buyout firms new confidence in the public markets.  This also shows confidence in the travel market which is vulnerable to downturns in the economy when consumers are less likely to go on vacations and businesses trip travel expenses.  Buyout firms have made an estimated $2 trillion in leveraged buyouts since 2004 and investors who have suffered heavy losses in the last two years are becoming anxious to make some profits on those investments.
Barclays Capital, Credit Suisse Group AG, UBS AG, Deutsche Bank AG and Citigroup Inc. were hired to advise on the share sale, slated to take place in London as early as February, said the people, who declined to be identified because the plans haven't been announced.

Leveraged buyout firms are seizing on the 62 percent rebound in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index from a 12-year low in March to return cash to investors. Blackstone led a group that bought New York-based Travelport from Cendant Corp. for $4.3 billion in 2006. Travelport owns 48 percent of online booking company Orbitz Worldwide (OWW) as well as the Galileo and Worldspan brands.

"The big picture is the travel market has stabilized and is looking like it's ready to go up," said Michael Millman, founder of Millman Research Associates "Travelport has basically said they want to do an IPO at the right time, meaning when they can get a good price."  Source

See Initial Public Offering 2009

Also read all about the Blackstone Group

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Apollo Management Cedar Fair

Apollo Management Cedar Fair

Apollo Buys Cedar Fair Entertainment for $650m


Apollo Management LP has finally finished a deal--the firm's first in two years--to purchase a theme park company for $650 million.  Apollo will also take on Cedar Fair Entertainment Co.'s $1.7 billion of debt.  Stockholders in the company will be compensated with a 28% premium on the stock's closing price on Dec. 15.  After a rough patch, Apollo is back to making deals.

Looking at this deal, it suggests a high level of confidence in an economic recovery.  While other private equity firms are more inclined to invest in more recession proof industries like health care and energy, Apollo is taking on a business that relies on consumer spending.  If the economy takes another dip or the unemployment rate stays at its current level so that consumer spending doesn't rise, Apollo could be holding onto another debt-heavy company that fails to produce profits.  In other words, it may have another Linens-N-Things.  But private equity firms look for firms on the cheap and Apollo may have got the price they want at the right time, when Cedar Fair-investors are nervous enough still to sell but the worst of the economic recession is behind us.  Just a side note: Six Flags (a theme park giant) filed for Chapter 11 in June of this year.

Here's more from the Journal: 
Like many other companies reliant on consumer spending, Cedar Fair has seen its sales and profits fall. For the 12 months ended in September, Cedar Fair reported sales of $929 million, down from $992 million for the same period a year earlier. Net income tumbled to about $5 million from more than $50 million a year earlier. Cedar Fair shares slipped during 2009, dropping over 30% year-to-date compared with a 17% gain for the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The shares closed Wednesday at $9.08 each.

J.P. Morgan, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Barclays Capital, and UBS advised Apollo and, along with KeyBanc Capital Markets, provided approximately $1.95 billion in financing for the deal. Rothschild Inc. and Guggenheim Securities advised Cedar Fair.

One of Cedar Fair's rivals, Six Flags Inc., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in June, citing looming debt obligations and shareholder payments. Cedar Fair also faces a wall of debt obligations, which led it to seek out a sale of some assets earlier in the year. Apollo's expected purchase shows how those same debt markets have revived, allowing long-dormant private-equity firms to push back into deal-making. In November, private-equity firms General Atlantic and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. acquired the TASC consulting unit of Northrop Grumman Corp. for $1.65 billion, while TPG and Canada Pension Plan announced a $4 billion takeover of pharmaceutical data company IMS Health Inc.  Source



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Third Party Marketing Career

Third Party Marketing Career

Private Equity Fund Third Party Marketing Careers

Third Party Marketing Career, Third Party Marketing Careers, 3PM Career, 3PM Careers, 3rd Party Marketing CareerIf you are starting a third party marketing career you are in good company, dozens of highly experienced investment and private equity fund marketing/sales professionals are entering the industry each year.  While some professionals may leave an investment manager or buyout fund to start their own third party marketing firm many more first work or partner with an existing third party marketing firm. The benefits of starting or working for a third party marketing firm are many and doing either is relatively easy to do.  It's a great way to get to know the industry and get your foot in the door when you otherwise might not be able to.

If you can raise capital, and consistently bring in $100m-$200m/year you can typically eliminate most types of political/corporate risks while earning 2-10x more than you would while working for a large institution such as Lehman Brothers or Goldman Sachs. As the economy goes through this rough patch and bonuses are skimmed and 50 year old executives laid off I see this trend of third party marketing startups and career moves increasing.


Read more about private equity fund marketing here.

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Private Equity Break

Private Equity Break

Video Talks about Private Equity Players Taking a Break

Private equity activity is still very low and it's unclear when deals will return to pre-crisis levels.  Are private equity firms simply taking a break until the market stabilizes and they can gain better access to credit?  The following video considers private equity firms taking a break.  E-mail subscribers can watch the video here.



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Sovereign Wealth Funds

Sovereign Wealth Funds

Sovereign Wealth Funds Looking to Invest in Private Equity


Sovereign wealth funds, large state-owned investment vehicles, are looking to invest in buyout firms.  Sovereign wealth funds are typically a pool of wealth derived from economic surpluses or profits from a country's natural resources, then a manager will invest those profits in various areas including alternative assets.

These pools of capital are a potential fundraising resource for private equity firms, which could make up for the lower interest from other institutional investors following the crisis.  The sovereign wealth fund industry has an eye on private equity and the funds want to deepen their relationships with the buyout world.  One way the two funds can work together is through a sort of club deal like when Singapore's GIC invested alongside Swedish private equity firm EQT in a German publishing firm.  Sovereign wealth funds are investing in private equity firms as well:

In the same way China's CIC took a stake in Europe's Apax Partners [APAX.UL] as well as investing in its fund, however, these investors want special terms and first right to participate alongside buyout houses in deals, as a means of enhancing returns.

"Some sovereign wealth funds are ready to put large amounts of money to work, but they want to be considered a special investor," said Antoine Drean, chairman of placement agent Triago.
Private equity firms, eyeing new deals as debt markets loosen, are concerned their traditional investor base of pension funds and endowments will start rowing back on commitments to fundraisings once current capital is exhausted.

"Who are the only people with deep enough pockets to take up the slack? It's the sovereign wealth funds," said a private equity manager, who declined to be named.

So they are courting the sovereign wealth funds and sovereign wealth funds are in a position to call the shots.  Source

To purchase a list of sovereign wealth funds and contacts within the fund, see Investor Databases


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Private Equity Tax Increase

Private Equity Tax Increase

House Votes to Raise Taxes on Private Equity


The U.S. House of Representatives has voted to raise taxes on private equity and venture capital managers.  The vote mandated that private equity managers will have to pay more than twice as much taxes on carried interest.   Carried interest is the percentage of profits earned by the fund for investors, so in a typical 2 and 20 fee structure, managers are compensated with 2% of the fund's assets for management expenses and 20% is the reward for performance (the carry).   Read more about carried interest here.

Currently, fund managers treat carried interest as capital gains and therefore only pay 15%.  If the measure passes the Senate, carried interest will be considered ordinary income and thus face a 35% tax.  The president of the Private Equity Council, which represents several large private equity firms, has defended the current tax treatment saying, “Carried interest is appropriately taxed as a long-term capital gain because it represents the profit that an investment partnership earns by buying a capital asset...and eventually selling it for more than the purchase price.”  The bill is not expected to pass in the Senate.
The House voted 241-181 today, largely along party lines, to end fund managers’ ability to pay the 15 percent capital- gains tax rate on the share of fund profits they are paid as compensation. The proposal, unlikely to pass the Senate, would tax those payments - known as carried interest - as ordinary income with a top 35 percent rate.

“Those who invest their own money will continue to receive capital gains tax treatment,” said Michigan Democrat Sander Levin. “Those who manage other people’s money will have to pay ordinary income tax like everybody else who performs services.”

House Democrats have twice before passed the tax increase over the objections of Republicans who say it would discourage investment. The measure would renew 45 tax breaks due to expire Dec. 31, including a research credit that businesses use to hire workers, and tax benefits for restaurants, retailers, teachers and college students.  Source
Read about Obama's plans regarding Carried Interest
Answer to What is Carried Interest?


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Mergers and Acquisitions Deals 2010

Mergers and Acquisitions Deals 2010

Dealmakers Predict Uptick in M&A Deals in 2010

Corporate and private dealmakers predict that mergers and acquisitions will increase during the first half of 2010.  This uptick will be led by manufacturing, financial services and health care, according to those surveyed by the Association for Corporate Growth, including investment bankers, private equity professionals, lawyers and other dealmakers.  82% of those surveyed believed that merger activity will increase over the next six months showing a strong confidence in M&A.

Forty percent of those surveyed believe a quarter to half of the deals in that period would be distressed deals, while about 52 percent thought that less than a quarter of those deals would involve distressed assets.

The biggest expected obstacle to deals in the first half of 2010 is expected to be sellers who won't sell at current multiples, according to 37 percent of survey respondents. About 29 percent of those surveyed were more worried about the credit crunch.

"Business owners are slowly realizing that valuations will not return to what they were several years ago. Private equity and strategic buyers are all too aware of this and are patiently waiting for sellers to come to grips with the new valuation paradigm and to take some money off the table," Harris Smith, a managing partner of private equity and strategic relationships at Grant Thornton and a past chairman of ACG, said in a statement.
Source
For a list of 1,000+ private equity firms, see our Private Equity Firm Directory

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Carried Interest Tax

Carried Interest Tax

Bill Seeks to Raise Taxes on Private Equity Carry


H.R. 4213, a bill filed by the House Ways and Means Committee, seeks to change the way carried interest is taxed.  Under the proposed legislation, the carry would no longer be taxed at a lower rate as long term capital gain and instead face the normal ordinary income tax rate.  The Private Equity Council, a trade association representing several large private equity firms, issued the following statement:
“Raising taxes on growth investments by private equity, real estate and many other partnerships just doesn’t make sense — particularly in this time of fragile economic recovery and continuing joblessness. By more than doubling the tax rate, the carried interest proposal will discourage investment; deprive many American businesses of the capital they need to survive and grow; and jeopardize critical job creation opportunities.

“The bill also would impose a significant new tax burden on investment partnerships that wish to offer shares to the public — a provision that would discriminate among and between firms and further reduce important investments.

“Carried interest is appropriately taxed as a long-term capital gain because it represents the profit that an investment partnership earns by buying a capital asset — in the case of private equity, a company — increasing its value over time and eventually selling it for more than the purchase price.

“Congress established a lower capital gains tax rate to encourage long-term investments that grow the economy. In the case of private equity, that’s just what has happened. In the past six years, private equity partnerships in the United States invested more than $240 billion in equity in American businesses. Congress should not put future investments at risk by raising taxes now.”  Source
What is Carried Interest?
Read about Obama's plan for carried interest tax



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Additional Industry Websites

Additional Industry Websites







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Fund Marketing Mistakes

Top 10 Fund Marketing Mistakes

Top 10 Mistakes Made in Marketing Private Equity Funds



I have worked a great deal with Richard Wilson and we have put together a list of top 10 fund marketing mistakes based on his experience as a third party fund marketer and our work with hedge funds and private equity funds.  Our team provides over 1,600 funds a year with capital raising advice, resources and products. Our team has also helped raise hundreds of millions of dollars in capital as well. Through these two sources of experience we see many of the same fund marketing mistakes made over and over again.


If you can avoid these mistakes you will be more effective than 80% of your competitors in the marketplace.


Top 10 Fund Marketing Mistakes:
  1. Mistake #1:  You have a 3 month capital raising goal.  This is un-realistic and the wrong mindset to go out of the gates with. You need to plan, build relationships, educate potential clients, and design high quality marketing strategies and materials for the long term. It takes time to raise lots of capital and usually the more valuable the investor, the longer the sales cycle. Don't try to cram everything into a 1-3 month capital raise.
  2. Mistake #2:  Counting on simply building a track record and then hoping to outsource all marketing to a great third party marketing firm down the road.  This puts all of your eggs into the third party marketing basket. Third party marketers have hundreds of potential clients approach them each year, it is risky to assume one will not only take you on as a client but actually raise a sustainable level of capital for you.
  3. Mistake #3: Spending $8,000 on graphic design and website design but $0 on hiring someone who is an expert at sales letter construction, writing copy, and creating headlines and taglines for your positioning in the marketplace that will be effective.  Many times I see fund managers that want to look very professional but there is no meat in what they are saying, or hook to draw in the reader.
  4. Mistake #4:  Not dedicating resources to capital raising is the most obvious mistake that I see in the industry. Many fund managers will act as the CIO, make 2-3 phone calls a week or sometimes per month and then wonder why they have not raised more capital.  Performance does NOT market itself, pedigree does NOT swing all doors wide open.  You need to have dedicated resources, an internal marketing resource working at least 20 hours/week, investor databases so you can spend your time calling on real prospects instead of always having to qualify them, and have a growing internal CRM or IRM system in place to track this investment in investor relationships.  
  5. Mistake #5:  Speaking at conferences full of your closest competitors instead of your highest value potential investors.
  6. Mistake #6: Under-estimating the value of a first name basis relationship with your top investor prospects.  Some professionals, especially those with technical backgrounds think that marketing is a numbers game. Yes, you have to sometimes reach out to many to develop relationships with few but relationships is at the core of everything that gets done.  Like Gitomer says, "all things equal people like to do business with friends, all things being unequal people still like to do business with friends."
  7. Mistake #7: Another capital raising mistake I see in the fund management space is a lack of capital raising training or fund marketing instruction.  You do not have to pay to have your marketing staff trained but at the very least you should document your own best practices, processes, investor pipeline development plans so they can be easily communicated to team members, board members and then constantly improved each quarter.  
  8. Mistake #8:  Missing the boat on authority positioning, educational forms of marketing, and improving their own pedigree standing within the industry.
  9. Mistake #9: Writing off PR: Most managers shy away from or completely ignore public relations as an avenue for helping create interest and positioning for experts on their team.  Many funds have now successfully employed the media to spread messages about their fund.
  10. Mistake #10:  A mistake that I see 90%+ funds doing today is using a boring, run of the milll Unique Selling Proposition (USP), or worse yet, not having one at all.


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Video on Private Equity in China

Video on Private Equity in China

Video: Private Equity Interest in China Increases

I have been covering private equity in China as much as possible because I believe it is going to be a huge market for buyout activity over the next few years especially while the West suffers from a lack of liquidity and a weak IPO market.  Here is a short video I came across today commenting on private equity firms' interest in China.  Chris Cooper, head of private equity at Deloitte North China, says that the results from a recent survey show that more and more buyout firms are trying to invest in China's growth market, especially consumer-based and healthcare sectors.  E-mail subscribers can watch the video here.




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Private Equity Salary Freeze

Private Equity Salary Freeze

6 of 10 Surveyed Private Equity Firms Freeze Salaries


Private equity firms offer highly competitive compensation packages which is a major factor in why the industry has been so successful at attracting talented young professionals and keeping experienced management satisfied.  But as assets under management and performance fell, so did the revenue buyout firms earn from fees; as a result, many firms had to cut costs by reducing compensation and lowering recruitment offers.

Earlier this year I noted a trend in compensation in which larger buyout firms were cutting salaries and bonuses while smaller firms were increasing compensation.  This was most likely a play by smaller buyout firms to attract top tier talent while the industry was suffering most in the recession.  Bigger buyout firms with larger staff recognized the inevitable need to cut costs and at a time when the financial industry's future was uncertain it was unlikely that cutting salaries would lead any staff to quit.

Now, it seems that the smaller- to mid-sized private equity firms are having to make the tough decision to freeze salaries.  The 2010 Preqin private equity compensation and employment review estimates that 6 out of 10 private equity firms have frozen salaries or plan to do so.  In response to the economic downturn and heavy losses over the 12-18 months, 38% of surveyed buyout shops froze salaries and 22% are considering doing so.

My view on this news is that this is not unexpected given the current state of the private equity industry and compensation is still very good but this does give recruiters from competing financial industries a chance to lure private equity professionals.  I would not be surprised if more private equity firms try to trim expenses further with pay cuts over the next few months, at least until deal flow returns to a normal level.  Until then private equity firms are at a disadvantage to the remaining investment banks that have made a swift recovery and hedge funds.

Goldman Sachs and the Surviving Investment Banks

Consider Goldman Sachs: the firm made national headlines for its remarkable turnaround and surprisingly high earnings.  In the first three quarters of 2009, Goldman Sachs has put aside $16.7 billion for employee compensation and it is reasonable to assume that the investment bank will be able to draw talent from other industries and firms ravaged by the financial crisis. (See story on Wall Street bonuses)  Goldman Sachs and the other surviving investment banks will probably be able to leverage their returning clients and increasing AUM to revive compensation packages and strengthen recruiting.

The Return of Hedge Funds

Hedge funds are on track for a record year and a recent estimate predicts hedge fund assets under management to reach $1.75 trillion by the end of 2010.  Hedge fund performance has consistently increased through 2009 with only a slight drop last month.  Investors are expected to flock back to hedge funds as they become more confident in the industry.  Hedge funds typically generate quicker returns to investors than buyouts which make long-term investments and may take years before making a profit.   This has probably pushed the hedge fund industry above private equity in terms of recruitment although hedge funds are not seen as the safest employers given the scandals and failures of even top-tier hedge fund firms.

Conclusion

Overall, it's safe to assume that private equity firms face stiff competition from hedge funds, traditional investment firms, and investment banks.  The fact that 6 out of 10 surveyed firms have frozen salaries does not help recruitment and the maintaining of veteran staff but poor-performing hedge funds and I-banks are in a similar situation.  Interestingly, 43% of surveyed firms actually increased bonuses so buyout firms may be aware of the competition and trying to keep hold of good employees and executives.  If the buyout industry can make a similar comeback as hedge funds or some investment banks, we can expect to see bonuses rise again and salaries slowly increase. 


Here is more on the salary freeze from the WSJ:
“The salary freezes are more common at the top,” said Tim Friedman, a spokesman for Preqin. “More junior level staff are receiving increases because it is more important to retain their salaries high.” He said this is because junior staff often have a less-vested interest in the firm via carried interest, so they need salary increases to motivate them.

The general trend to freeze salaries was accompanied by firms reining in bonuses. Nearly half of firms, or 43%, cut bonuses, with the payouts falling 40% on average.  Still, another 43% of firms increased bonuses, with bonuses rising an average of 21% at these firms. Bonuses remained flat at another 14% of firms.

About 14% of firms have reduced staff, and a further 12% are considering doing so, Preqin said.  According to Neil Macdougall, managing partner of U.K. midmarket buyout firm Silverfleet Capital, the squeeze on salaries isn’t as important for those executives who are confident that in the long-term they will receive carried interest, or the cut of the profit that private-equity firms receive on their investments, typically 20% of any profit.
Read more on private equity compensation here.
Watch a video on Private Equity Starting Salary here.
Also see Private Equity Salaries Increase


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Multifamily Offices

 Multifamily Offices

Multifamily Offices Attract More Clients in Recession


Family offices represent an important capital source for private equity and venture capital firms.  Multifamily offices have picked up a good amount of clients in the recession as wealthy families move away from the large banks and prime brokerage houses.  It is estimated that multifamily offices boosted their number of clients by 9% last year, suggesting this a potential long term shift to family offices especially as the industry receives more attention.

A multifamily office takes on a range of duties from managing wealth and making investments to monitoring taxes and paying bills.  Multifamily offices also look for larger clients typically beyond $20 million, whereas a single family office will take in $1 million clients.  According to Barron's, Bessemer Trust is the largest multifamily office in terms of assets under advisement at $52 billion and Geller Family Office Services advises the largest accounts with $278 million being the average.
In general, multifamily offices fared well during the turmoil of the past year. Assets under advisement fell by just 9.2% in 2008 at a sampling of multifamily offices, according to a survey by the Family Wealth Alliance. By contrast, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 34%.

Another telling number: Client attrition was less than 3%. If only the giant banks and brokerages could say the same.

"The multifamily-office model is growing, and attracting wealthy families," says Austin Shapard, president of Rockefeller & Co.

The industry does have its skeptics. They argue that multifamily offices aren't much different from hundreds of other wealth-management concerns that also serve families -- from independent money managers to financial conglomerates.

Leaders of multifamily offices insist otherwise. They say their industry is focused more tightly than other providers on the complex, multigenerational needs of moneyed clans. In addition, they claim to be free of the pressures to "sell" any particular financial products, often a complaint about brokerages and banks.  Source



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