- The Observer,
- Sunday September 28 2008
- Article history
Between 50 and 200 private equity-owned firms are in danger of breaching their banking covenants before Christmas, raising the spectre of bankruptcies and thousands of job losses.
That prediction comes from Jon Moulton, the boss of private equity firm Alchemy Partners, who has been critical of the excesses of his industry over the past two years. He says: 'Covenants are in danger of being breached because operating profit will be insufficient to cover interest payments. Firms will go bankrupt or will need to be rescued by the banks via debt-for-equity swaps.'
He says the most vulnerable companies are those that were the targets of highly leveraged bids, sealed at the height of the credit boom between 2006 and 2007. Deals were struck under which private-equity predators borrowed at least 10 times the amount of equity they invested. They hoped to refinance deals on more favourable terms, once acquisitions were bedded down, but this has become impossible because banks are now so reluctant to lend.
Some analysts fear a bloodbath in the private equity-owned industry, which employs about one quarter of all employees in the private sector. As revealed by The Observer two weeks ago, Permira, headed by Damon Buffini - a key business adviser to Gordon Brown - has seen the value of its stakes in several big companies plummet in value, in particular its holdings in German television broadcaster ProSiebenSat.1 and Freescale, the US semiconductor and technology company that has an operation in East Kilbride. Although there is no suggestion that these businesses are in distress, others may not be so lucky.
A City source says: 'A lot of private equity deals were done when the idea was to load them up with debt, sweat the assets and flip them quickly via a trade sale or flotation on the stock market for a huge profit. But those days are gone and if you borrowed too much, you are between a rock and a very hard place.'
In the past few months, private-equity-owned nursing home operators Four Seasons Health Care and Southern Cross have run into difficulties, with Southern Cross breaching banking covenants in July. But both have recently secured funds to stabilise themselves.
Last week Guy Hands, the British private equity baron behind last year's purchase of music company EMI, told a conference that, after the credit crisis, 'there will be fewer people working in private equity and they will get paid less, and that is not necessarily a bad thing.'
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