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)

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