Finding Value Investments in Private Equity
Finding Value Investments in Private Equity
Private investors and venture capitalists are always looking for the next great company, idea or product to put their money into, in order to reap great financial rewards down the road. However, how do private investors know where to find the true value investments that exist?
Experienced Investor
Jonathan Coslet is the Chief Investment Officer at Texas Pacific Group, also known as TPG capital, and he has been with the firm since its inception in 1993. He also serves on TPG’s Executive Committee. Before joining TPG, Jonathan started his career at Drexel Burnham Lambert and later moved to Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette. His formal education includes earning a BS in economics and finance from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania where he was Valedictorian and later he received his MBA from Harvard Business School, where he was a Baker Scholar. Jonathan currently serves on the Board of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, the Stanford Children’s Hospital and the Stanford Medical Advisory Council. Jonathan and I discussed TPG’s state of private equity, as the company currently has almost $80 billion under its management. So I asked Jonathan how he finds the value investments?
Working on the Fringe
“At the end of the day, we have to be what I call fringe capital. Private equity as a whole is maybe 5 percent of the entire equity market capital ecosystem. The public markets are very efficient. They are getting more and more efficient every day and therefore the return on that capital is going to be tighter. We have to play around the fringes. We have to see things that others don’t see and we have to be willing to do things that others won’t do.” Jonathan said his firm has to do two things around the fringes. He said they have to have a different or uncommon point of view as an investor, which means they have to specialize, which includes both industry specialization and geographical specialization.
A Change for the Better
The other thing they need to do, according to Jonathan is to change or improve companies once they own them. “We have to do the hard work, like we did at Continental Airlines, like we did at Burger King, like we did with so many other companies along the way. That often means changing management. It often means employing new operational and strategic approaches to companies that for whatever reason aren’t being managed in a way that is aligned with the shareholders’ way.” Jonathan then explained that when you have a different point of view as an investor and you can change companies, you can outperform. “It’s hard. It takes a lot of work and it takes a lot of capabilities that you develop over time, but that’s what we do.”
Be Honest With Yourself
Jonathan concluded by saying that you have to be very selective. If you realize that you don’t see it in a very different way from everyone else or you don’t think you can really change it then maybe it’s not worth the investment because you can’t add a lot of value to it, as opposed to the ones where you do have a different point of view and where you do have a different strategic approach to operational improvement.
Contact Us here
Power of Innovation | Dean Sivara
Power of Innovation About Dean Sivara Dean is the Vice President of Innovation & New Businesses, in the Products & Innovation Group. The Innovation and New Businesses practice is one of SAP’s global incubation and commercialization engines, looking to capitalize on industry disruptions and building new businesses in adjacent markets. The Innovation group evaluates new…
Real Estate 101 | Sherri Stoneberger
About Sherri Stoneberger Stonberger received her foundation of work ethics. growing up on a family farm in Oklahoma. She attended college at the University of Central Oklahoma, earning a degree in human development, with a physical education minor. After graduation she became a military wife and eventually settled in the Mission, Fremont area where…
Optimizing Your App | Trevor Cornwell
About Trevor Cornwell Trevor Cornwell, Founder and CEO, appbackr inc., a Palo Alto-based Market Exchange for Apps. Appbackr helps publishers and platforms identify the rights apps to optimize revenue. Appbackr is a winner of the PayPal X Developer Challenge, an OnMobile 100 Company and an AlwaysOn 250 Company. Cornwell’s career has been spent developing and…
Intel Chief Economist | Paul Thomas
About Paul Thomas Paul Thomas is chief economist and manager of market sizing and forecasting at Intel Corporation in Santa Clara, Calif. He joined Intel in December, 2004, after working at Continental Airlines in Houston, Texas, from 1997 to 2004 and as chief economist from 2001 to 2004. Paul was senior economist at Douglas Aircraft…