THE NEW LOOK - L-GAM
Transcription
THE NEW LOOK - L-GAM
realdeals.eu.com 31 OCTOBER 2013 T HE I N D E P E N D E N T VO I C E O F E U R O P E A N P R I VAT E E Q U I T Y THE NEW LOOK L-GAM’s team explain how they can bring a fresh perspective to private equity. FEATURES L-GAM Felipe Merry Del Val L-GAM OF THRONES Jerome Bertrand THERE’S A NEW KID ON THE BLOCK, AND IT HAS ROYAL APPROVAL. REAL DEALS SPOKE TO FERDINANDO GRIMALDI, YVES ALEXANDRE AND FELIPE MERRY DEL VAL ABOUT HOW THEY PLAN TO OPERATE. Interview James Harris Photography Richard Gleed 6 } realdeals 31 October 2013 L-GAM FEATURES Yves Alexandre You have a strong relationship with the Princely Family of Liechtenstein – the firm’s name, L-GAM, stands for Liechtenstein and then your three surnames. How did that relationship come about? Grimaldi: We’ve known Max [Prince Maximilian of Liechtenstein] for many, many years. Personally, I worked together with him in the early 1990s when I was at Chase Capital in the US. Max has been a private equity practitioner for many years – now he’s managing his family’s business. For the last four or five years we’ve been discussing whether there was some common ground to do business together. From their point of view, the majority of their business is linked to asset management and private banking through LGT. They have for some time expressed a desire to diversify away from financial services and the other assets in their Ferdinando Grimaldi portfolio such as art and real estate, agriculture and forestry, which are part of the family heritage. They want greater exposure to operating companies. It’s important to note that this is not a family office, or a managed account. It is an independent investment vehicle with a strong anchor investor. Is it structured as a traditional LP fund? Alexandre: We wanted to make sure there is a better alignment of interests than is available in a lot of other funds. Right from the start, we want it to be clear that we are not looking to make money on fees and that we will instead be incentivised on performance. We wanted a structure that enabled us to act in the long term. We wanted to avoid situations in which we were obliged to sell companies because we reached the end of a fund, and it was no longer possible to provide capital to support growth projects. I always felt it frustrating that if you found a great business, you weren’t able to hold on to it because in some ways, private equity is a business of rotating assets and returning capital regularly. We want to hold on to winners. That’s why we have a 15-year life rather than the more traditional ten-year period. Grimaldi: We have also insisted that in this environment, we need to have a completely flexible mandate. For that reason, we can pursue normal control-oriented leveraged buyouts as well as growth capital. Throughout our careers, we have always done control-oriented transactions – we know how to behave as controlling shareholders. But today there are specific realdeals.eu.com { 7 FEATURES L-GAM circumstances where we can be flexible and be a minority shareholder when the right governance is in place. Alexandre: We have identified that SMEs are facing trouble raising capital, and that is exactly what we are trying to address. And by capital, I mean a broad definition. It could be a junior debt instrument, equity, a strip with warranties and equity rights. We can help out management teams undergoing succession, or help companies realise their growth ambitions. Grimaldi: We’re also interested in distressed situations, particularly in continental Europe, where those deals tend to take the form of a debt restructuring, not necessarily loan-to-own. We have the flexibility to do those types of transactions as well. Are you concerned that other LPs committing capital at a later date are put off by the prominence of your anchor investor? Alexandre: I think some LPs might view it positively. They will understand that this is a long-term investor with a history of successful investments. And we will have the right structure to make sure the governance is appropriate. We acknowledge that some LPs might not be attracted to this kind of arrangement. It’s clearly a difficult time for new firms entering the market. Why did you decide to go it alone? Grimaldi: It was always an important aspiration in my career to raise a fund with like-minded people that I’ve worked with before. The four of us were at Investcorp. I left in 2002, Felipe left in 2003 and Yves left in June this year. In the meantime, I left to join Bain Capital. Felipe joined a couple of years later, in 2006. Jerome Bertrand, the fourth partner, also worked at Bain Capital. We all worked in the industry for 20 years and we wanted to do our own thing at the same time. And there are good opportunities. A lot of private equity players have disappeared, particularly in Southern Europe. Yes, the market has been difficult, but investors are now more willing to put money to work and valuations are recovering. A lot of LPs have received distributions, and they are feeling better about putting money back into the asset class. And investors are hungry for yield – government bonds are offering just one or two per cent, high-yield bonds just five or six per cent. Although the public markets are much stronger this year, there is still a lot of volatility. You’re looking to invest in SMEs – that’s very different from what Bain Capital typically does, isn’t it? Grimaldi: I’m not sure that’s true. At Investcorp, we were making investments with an enterprise value from $100m (€72.7m) businesses to $1bn at the most, and that was during the good years. 8 } realdeals 31 October 2013 “” THE MARKET HAS BEEN DIFFICULT, BUT INVESTORS ARE NOW WILLING TO PUT MONEY TO WORK AND VALUATIONS ARE RECOVERING Alexandre: In the past few years Investcorp has been focused on a maximum enterprise value of $200m to $300m, so very much in the mid-market. Grimaldi: Meanwhile at Bain, when I arrived in 2002 our first European fund was $500m, so it was very different from what the firm was doing at the end of 2006 or in 2007. The market changed a lot while I was there. If you look at our combined experience, in the last couple of years 80 per cent of the investments were in SMEs, and by that I mean companies with an enterprise value between $100m and $300m. You mentioned that SMEs are finding it difficult to access finance. Which geographies will you be focusing on? Grimaldi: Right now I think there is a market dislocation in Southern Europe. On the supply side, a lot of firms L-GAM FEATURES “” WE DON’T WANT TO BE VIEWED AS INVESTORS THAT FOCUS ON FINANCIAL ENGINEERING. WE WANT TO STICK TO WHAT DROVE RETURNS HISTORICALLY have disappeared or are very cautious, and that represents a clear opportunity. I can’t give a breakdown of what the portfolio will look like, but we have a good track record in Italy, Spain and France, and we’re also interested in the German market. It also helps that I’m Italian, Yves is French, Felipe is Italian and Spanish and Jerome is French and German. Today there are a lot of global businesses that generate the majority of their turnover outside the country in which they are based. If a company is headquartered in Spain or Italy, let alone Portugal or Greece, they get penalised. Their valuation will be lower and their access to finance will be much more difficult. There really is no reason for these companies to be penalised. Alexandre: We don’t want to be pigeonholed. There is a big opportunity in Southern Europe at the moment, but clearly there are SMEs in other markets and we intend to expand our team to include the German market as well. It doesn’t help that SMEs in Spain and Italy have a much higher cost of financing than their counterparts in France or Germany… Grimaldi: That’s true but the real problem is access. At the height of the eurozone crisis in 2011 and the beginning of 2012, you could see it everywhere – there was a huge difference between Italian and German government bond yields. It’s much less now, but the spread for SMEs is much less transparent. We’ve done a lot of work on this and it’s clear that access to credit is one of the biggest issues hindering SME growth plans, particularly in Southern Europe. Of course, it’s very different for companies that can access the bond market, but none of the companies we’re looking at are in that range. You mentioned that you’d consider co-investing with other private equity funds. Do you think that will be a significant part of your business? Grimaldi: I think it will be the exception rather than the rule. I don’t think there will be traditional private equity funds looking at the same opportunities as us, so I can’t see it being more than 20 per cent. Merry del Val: It’s more likely, given our structure, that we’d co-invest with management teams and other entrepreneur-led companies that want to open up their capital for us. It’s also more likely that banks will team up with us. Banks hate loan-to-own, because it means investors buy debt at ten cents on the dollar. Banks will occasionally do it when they have to get rid of the paper. But they hate crystallising the losses. So what tends to happen is banks amend and pretend, they kick the can down the road, and they know they’re doing it, but it buys time. There’s an opportunity to work in a collaborative way with banks if you can come in with a capital increase, strengthen the management team, make sure you get some protection on the new money, but still work with banks to return a big part of their exposure. That is something that banks are more receptive to. But a lot of banks in Europe are still reluctant to work with private equity firms in such a way… Alexandre: There are other factors at play. European banks simply couldn’t take the losses – they didn’t have the capital. That’s why they have been much slower to act than US banks. European banks cannot afford to do that because they are unwilling to do a rights issue and wash out existing shareholders. Certainly in Southern Europe, banks are cautious about diluting existing shareholders. So banks have been slow to clean up portfolios. This is why there have been so few distressed deals in Europe. Do you think that will change? Grimaldi: I think banks in Europe are getting closer to the point where they are ready and able to take writedowns. In the last four years they have been able to rebuild their capital bases, and they’re more profitable. A lot of banks have big exposure to government bonds. When government bonds went underwater because of the eurozone crisis, banks were making losses. Now with the help of the ECB, the situation is normalising. Central banks are pushing for solutions that are more definitive. In Spain they have formed the bad bank; something similar is being discussed in Italy. We are getting there. I’m not saying there will be a flood of opportunities in the next couple of months but we are getting there. Returns for European private equity have been pretty disappointing in recent years, especially compared with public equities. Do you think the returns that the market became accustomed to will recover or were they the result of one-off conditions, namely a wave of privatisations and a nascent private equity industry? Grimaldi: I don’t think you can judge private equity on the basis of a couple of years. Public markets are very volatile, so returns in the last year have been positive, but will they last? Undoubtedly there are cycles in private equity. The one from 2002 to 2008 was very positive. There was strong global economic growth, inflation was low, plenty of leverage was available, as well as multiple accretion. The stars were aligned. I think we’re in a period where we’re going back to a more normal private equity environment. We have to ensure that we do well every step of the way – buying well, adding value during the ownership period and selling well. It is no longer reasonable for us to assume, as we could in 2006, that someone is going to bail us out in the end just because leverage is going to be higher and the market will be exuberant. Alexandre: We don’t want to be viewed as investors that focus on financial engineering. We want to stick to what drove returns historically, spotting the opportunities where capital is needed and buying well. Leverage is creeping up to pre-crisis levels. Is there a risk we’re heading back into a boom? Grimaldi: Monetary conditions are exceptionally favourable, but I think that will change. Interest rates are very low and there is a lot of liquidity in the system because of quantitative easing. Alexandre: A lot of companies have been refinanced, so the problem has been moved by a couple of years. It may not be easy to raise the same amount of debt two years from now. Merry del Val: At one point there was a clear flight to quality for larger deals. There were safe, defensible transactions between 2008 and 2009. The real high-quality assets, on the whole, went for high multiples, and they still found pretty interesting levels of financing. Pets at Home is a good example. That part of the market hasn’t come down as much. For SMEs, they definitely have come down. Debt for me is an amplifier of performance – for good or bad. Debt is a way of lowering your cost of capital, but it’s also a tool to be used with care. It is good up to a level, and beyond that it generally just benefits sellers. It means they can get a higher multiple. During a good period, the money that was spent buying the asset could have been used in other ways and therefore stifles the company’s growth. In a bad period, the ability to withstand crisis is hampered. Either way, excessive debt is not good. Family offices have been more active in recent years. Are you seeing greater competition from these investors? Alexandre: We’re definitely seeing a trend now. Initially, family offices had a lot of capital to deploy and they wanted to do that more cheaply, so they increased the number of co-investments. Now they are starting to do direct investments and they’re building their own teams. There will be some successes, and some failures. It’s not easy to create the right team – it takes a lot of time. If you look at the LPs that have done direct investments for a long time, a lot of them have had ups and downs. If family offices aren’t paying fees then they can afford to pay a higher price and still get the same return. Are you concerned that pricing will increase? Alexandre: I don’t think so. Family offices tend to be pretty prudent and use less leverage. Besides, they don’t have the resources of endowments and pension funds, which have millions of dollars to deploy. Family offices may become more active, but they won’t drive the boom. realdeals.eu.com { 9