The State of the Private Equity Industry—Is It All Down Hill From Here?

state-of-the-private-equity

 

In the past private equity has been a solid way of investing taking in trillions of capital, but with the ever changing world we live in, what is the state of the industry? Private equity investments typically consist of money being placed in a company by venture capital firms, private equity firms or angel investors. These are companies that are not publicly traded on any stock exchange and typically they are looking to launch, grow or prepare for a buyout. The money invested is typically aimed at expanding or creating new products or in some cases to fund a restructuring of the company. Private equity is a powerful force in the success of private companies that are not publicly traded. So what is the state of the private equity industry?

The Private Equity Industry Is Healthy

To answer that question, I spoke with Jonathan Coslet, Chief Investment Officer, and Senior Partner of TPG Capital. Jonathan explained that the private equity industry, like all industries, “is maturing but the core raison d’etre for the industry is growing rapidly and that’s because of our core client, our pension funds and our sovereign wealth funds in particular.” Jonathan compared the private equity industry to state governments. He said whereas the average state government is getting about 7-8 percent annually on its investments, the average firm in the private equity industry has returned about 13 or 14 percent every year over the last 30 years. “So it’s been delivering very strong returns against a US stock market that’s maybe 7 or 8 percent. So the need for the pension funds, sovereign wealth funds and insurance companies endowments to outperform fixed income securities and regular way public equities is creating real demand for our services.” Because of these factors the industry is growing and today the private equity industry has about $2 trillion of capital under its control.”

Growth Investing

I asked Jonathan what investment strategies he prefers the most. He mentioned two generic approaches that he would take as an investor: growth and inflection.  He explained growth to be the following: “there’s going to be a lot of folks who are 65 and 85 or older so there’s going to be a huge demand for healthcare services. So that’s just a secular growth that’s driven demographically and I need to figure out which part of that sector I want to get in front of because it has the most growth and has a supply-demand imbalance.” It’s important to get in front of something with a growing demand while supply is still lagging because this gives you pricing power.

Inflection Investing

On the other hand, with inflection investing it’s not the slope of the curve, it’s the second derivatives, or the rate of change. “The slope is inflecting up so being in front of something that’s about to change and that usually means an industry that’s being disrupted in transition. It happens to be that healthcare has both characteristics: it’s growing and it’s changing.” When you look for something that has both growth and dynamic change together you find the “hot spots” of investing and if done right it can lead to tremendous success.

Check out my interviews with Jonathan Coslet below. For more interviews with Jonathan Coslet click here!

Jonathan Coslet- Investment Strategies

 

Jonathan Coslet- The State of Private Equity

 
Posted in
Family Business a Conversation with Pamela Kan, President of Bishop-Wisecarver Corporation

Family Businesses, Pamela Kan, President of Bishop-Wisecarver Corporation

Pamela Kan, CEO, Bishop-Wisecarver Corp. talks with the American Dreams show host, Alan Olsen, about family business and succession. Alan Olsen Hi, this is Alan Olsen and welcome to American Dreams. My guest today is Pamela Khan. She’s the president and owner of Bishop wise Carver. Welcome to today’s show. Pamela Kan Good morning, Alan.…

Using Your Money for Positive Change with Warren Stickney, Founder & Principal of Stickney Research

Using Your Money for Positive Change with Founder of Stickney Research

Using Your Money for Positive Change, with Founder of Stickney Research Warren Stickney is the founder and principal of Stickney Research, a firm that specializes in the design and implementation of net income makeup charitable remainder trusts (NIMCRT). In this interview, he discusses his passion on how to use your money for positive change in…

Committing to Humanity is So Important

Heidi Kuhn – Founder of Roots of Peace Heidi Kuhn is passionate about humanitarian work and has dedicated her life to making a difference in the world. As the founder of Roots of Peace, a humanitarian-nonprofit organization that is working to replace the scourge of landmines with sustainable agricultural farmland, Heidi, via Roots of Peace,…

Jason Earl

The Evolution of Business Education

The Evolution of Business Education Dr. Jason Earl, Director for the Willes Center for International Entrepreneurship at BYU-Hawaii Dr. Jason Earl Transcript: Alan   Can you share a little about your background?   Jason   I started down the path of engineering, ended up in corporate finance, ran a startup company, which sold to a private equity…