Thursday, March 25, 2010

Why some PE funds do better than others

For once, I do not have to write a cent from my own thinking in a post. The Mckinsey Quarterly article (though dated but clearly in with the theme of these times) sheds light on why fundamental outperformance is the only sustainable source of value creation (very very cliched, but terribly true).

Assuming there are no free lunches, there is so much to the arbitrage a PE fund can seek at the time of entry. A proprietary relationship built on trust and commitment can get you a discount but is not going to entirely contribute to an arbitrage opportunity. Of course, the smarter, seasoned ones can spot smart "buys" or smart "sells" in special situations (how many times a century are you going to have Goldman or a GE with a bowl in front of your house giving you a 10% preferred ?! or dump everything before a bubble ?) but for the majority of homo sapiens, the arbitrage opportunities are not worth too much salt.

Of course, pushing for outperformance means the obvious nitty-gritties - kicking tyres all the time to understand ground realities, understand organizational levers, spending quality time with top management and focussing on continuous improvisation.

But as a Private Equiteer, the piece de resistance is the fact that you can go to sleep every night assured in the fact your investment has appreciated (and is appreciating) even if a gale force hits the markets. That's priceless !


~Varadha
(varadha.r1@gmail.com)

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Entrepreneur and the art of identifying "Tipping Point'

Last week, I chanced upon Graham's essay on "what start-ups are really like". A lot of it holds true even in early growth companies (including investors are clueless !). The one thing that stuck me is every single business I have seen seems to go through that one single "Tipping point' or 'Inflexion Point' from which it emerges much stronger or much weaker (hence, takes on a different trajectory post that).


I am not necessarily talking about topline or bottomline (often they could be misnomers for the amount of confidence and dynamism you see in the Management team). It is just that one single event/incident/spark that changes the entrepreneur's outlook towards the meaning of his business and life. It ironically always comes from outside and from the most unexpected quarters - like a peer outside telling you what a great business this is or one of your suppliers telling you that you are his "fastest growing customer". Case in point being A.R. Rahman's music - if the Slumdog Millionaire recognition had not happened, he probably would have coasted along as yet another great Indian music director, only to be relegated to oblivion by the succeeding generation.


It seems it is one such small spark that turbocharges the small motor that is the human mind and makes it spin faster, harder and bigger. To quote from Malcolm Gladwell's The Tipping Point, it seems like one needs a connector (who are social trend setters) to make one realize his own potential (Johari Window, anyone ?).

As for my tipping point, I do not think I am there as yet...!


~Varadha (varadha.r1@gmail.com)

Monday, March 8, 2010

Private Equity : Absolute Vs Relative return

Coming on back of this great article I read on investing across Geographies, I am tempted to ask ourselves the question - is Private Equity an absolute or a relative return asset class ?

Most people investing in India over the last five years would tell you that private markets have had a much higher volatility and have underperformed the public markets overall (extremely illogical, no reason why size and liquidity premium should be negative). As things stand, if I were allocating assets I would be hard pressed to answer as to why I should choose Private Markets in India over public markets or better still, why I should choose India at all ?

Going by the flights/hotel test (Indian hotels are overpriced and yet overbooked and similar is the case with flights), it seems like India is seeing a bubble, at least for the time being. So are you better off betting on a star-fund manager in India (for the uptick provided by his alpha) or are you better off investing into the beta of a new market. Tough call, is'nt ?



Even in this era of globally mobile capital and minimal information asymmetries, the first movers stand to make an inordinately high return. With internet, new age media and mobile, the window of opportunities are becoming smaller and tighter which also means the rewards for the birds that spot the window are that much higher.

However, as an institutional investor are you looking to maximize returns in the medium term (3- 5 years) or in the long term (15-20 years). It seems like a lot of people are willing to stick their neck out for the long term and back fund managers that deliver superior alpha than piggyback on the next market beta wave. I guess the underlying logic must be sustenance of outperformance in the long run than a flash of brilliance in the medium term.

~Varadha (varadha.r1@gmail.com)