Private Equity Investing - The Boom is over

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Private Equity Investing - The Boom is over

Private Equity (PE) investing has grown dramatically over the past 5 years, and the private equity funds have produced excellent returns for investors. Private Equity funds have become very popular and trendy "alternative investments" that many large investors (high net worth families and institutional investors) have felt like that had to be involved with. Private Equity funds try to acquire companies or businesses cheaply. They use lots of tax-deductible debt to leverage their returns, cut costs to try to improve the short and long-term profitability, and sell assets to take capital out. Sometimes they pay themselves a dividend out of company owned assets, and they eventually (2-5 years later) sell out to another buyer or take the company public at a higher valuation. The favorable conditions that helped drive the recent private equity boom have changed dramatically over the past year. Future private equity returns will be much lower than they were over the past 5 years and could prove to be quite disappointing for many investors. I believe the private equity peak was 2006 and the first half of 2007. The Private Equity boom was driven by very cheap debt, a bull market in equities, a strong global economy, rising corporate profits, massive capital inflows into private equity, Sarbanes/Oxley reporting rules for public companies, and strong initial returns. Some of the large private equity companies are Blackstone, Carlyle Group, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, Texas Pacific, Thomas H. Lee, Cerberus and Bain Capital.

Private equity historical returns:


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