Preparing for exits: An opportune time for Private Equity?
Introduction
It came, it spread, it wrecked.
What started just as news in one corner of the world soon engulfed it. Now, almost half of the year into it, normalcy is still a far cry, with 73% of the respondents (mostly C-suite executives) to an E&Y survey believing the COVID-19 pandemic will have a severe impact on the global economy.
The pandemic continues to take a toll on global economies. The lockdowns imposed by governments to flatten the curve has impacted economic health. The global economy is expected to shrink by 3% in 2020, according to an IMF report, to its lowest since the global depression (1929). Economists forecast that the US economy will shrink 5.9%, the UK 6.5%, Germany’s 7% and Japan’s 5.2%. The cracks are just beginning to emerge.
Impact on private equity
Private equity (PE) activity has not remained unscathed. PE firms spent the first few months of the pandemic trying to keep steady against the unprecedented blow. They engaged in constant communication with the management teams of their portfolio companies to gauge the impact of the crisis on their performance. They were simultaneously in constant communication with limited partners (LPs), ensuring them of the safety of their investments and trying not to lose investors or having to deal with LPs’s requests for redemption of their interests.
PE activity (such as fundraising and deal-making) slowed amid the outbreak as PE firms tried to safeguard their portfolios from adverse impacts by dis-engaging from fundraising and exiting their investments
Impact on PE exits
The repercussions of the pandemic are now becoming visible after half a year of its outbreak. With uncertainty around how long the pandemic will last and reduced deal activity, PE valuations have taken a hit. Companies that appeared to be lucrative investment less than a year ago have suddenly become pain-points. PE investments in companies in the service sector, such as hospitality and energy companies, have been hit particularly hard.
While PE firms continue to evaluate their losses and portfolio investments amid the chaos, PE exits have been deprioritised. PE exits dropped by 70% in May 2020 according to McKinsey research, versus May 2019. In additional, the value of PE exits dropped to USD1.9bn, a 69% decline from 2H 2019.
It is uncertain how things will be when they return to “normal”. McKinsey conducted a survey of more than 40 sponsors, CEOs and investment bankers to gauge sentiment as to when conditions are likely to be conducive for normalised economic activity and PE exits. The timeframe was 6–18 months.
With declining economic activity, scheduled PE exits have been put on hold. PE firms are also reluctant to sell off their holdings given market volatility and investor sentiment, at least in the next 12 months. According to a survey conducted by Investec, 80% of the PE firms surveyed stated that they do not intend to exit their portfolios over the next year.
How PEs can prepare for an exit
The pandemic has put economies and industries on a defensive footing, continuing to monitor the situation and plan accordingly. An E&Y survey found that while 54% of respondents (C-suite executives) expect a U-shaped recovery, 38% forecast a V-shaped one 8% an L-shaped one.
PE managers usually spend around 3–5% of their time planning for an exit. However, given the current market volatility, they are deferring their exits and using the extra time on their hands to prepare and plan for a future exit in one of the following ways:
This additional time afforded to a PE firm is an opportune time for it to prepare its investments for (future) exit. This is because, once the situation normalises, needs and demands of investors (or end consumers) and market sentiment will change. Now is the time for PE firms to re-strategise and identify areas of growth in its portfolios to increase their (future) market value, and also to meet redefined market demand in time to come.
How Acuity Knowledge Partners can help
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