In finance, private equity is an asset class consisting of equity securities and debt in operating companies that are not publicly traded on a stock exchange.
A private equity investment will generally be made by a private equity firm, a venture capital firm or an angel investor. Each of these categories of investor has its own set of goals, preferences and investment strategies; however, all provide working capital to a target company to nurture expansion, new-product development, or restructuring of the company's operations, management, or ownership.
Bloomberg Businessweek has called private equity a rebranding of leveraged buyout firms after the
1980s. Among the most common investment strategies in private equity are: leveraged buyouts, venture capital, growth capital, distressed investments and mezzanine capital. In a typical leveraged buyout transaction, a private equity firm buys majority control of an existing or mature firm. This is distinct from a venture capital or growth capital investment, in which the investors (typically venture capital firms or angel investors) invest in young, growing or emerging companies, and rarely obtain majority control.
Private equity is also often grouped into a broader category called private capital, generally used to describe capital supporting any long-term, illiquid investment strategy.
In
January 1982, former
United States Secretary of the Treasury William Simon and a group of investors acquired
Gibson Greetings, a producer of greeting cards, for $80 million, of which only $1 million was rumored to have been contributed by the investors. By mid-1983, just sixteen months after the original deal,
Gibson completed a $290 million
IPO and
Simon made approximately $66 million.[51][52]
The success of the Gibson Greetings investment attracted the attention of the wider media to the nascent boom in leveraged buyouts. Between
1979 and
1989, it was estimated that there were over 2,
000 leveraged buyouts valued in excess of $250 million[53]
During the 1980s, constituencies within acquired companies and the media ascribed the "corporate raid" label to many private equity investments, particularly those that featured a hostile takeover of the company, perceived asset stripping, major layoffs or other significant corporate restructuring activities. Among the most notable investors to be labeled corporate raiders in the 1980s included
Carl Icahn,
Victor Posner,
Nelson Peltz,
Robert M. Bass,
T. Boone Pickens,
Harold Clark Simmons,
Kirk Kerkorian,
Sir James Goldsmith,
Saul Steinberg and
Asher Edelman. Carl Icahn developed a reputation as a ruthless corporate raider after his hostile takeover of
TWA in
1985. Many of the corporate raiders were onetime clients of
Michael Milken, whose investment banking firm,
Drexel Burnham Lambert helped raise blind pools of capital with which corporate raiders could make a legitimate attempt to take over a company and provided high-yield debt ("junk bonds") financing of the buyouts.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_equity
- published: 28 Jul 2013
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