Banking, finance, and taxes

Four Of Top Ten Private Equity Deals In Default, Or Worse

bearThe private equity business has been unkind to the firms that have done the largest LBO deals of the last year. That only makes sense. Leverage has been beaten down by the recession. PE firms assumed that large debt loads would be paid down from cash flow at the companies that they bought. Those assumptions did not forecast the worst recession in seven decades.

New Moody’s data shows that the ten largest private equity deals of all time are performing worse than comparable companies that were not bought out.

The New York Times reports that, “Four of the 10 companies have defaulted on their debts, one is about to, and at least three have done special deals — called distressed exchanges — to reduce the debt loads placed on them by private equity transactions.” Cerberus and Apollo have the worst performance among the large PE firms.

The Moody’sreport covered the period from January 2008 until September 2009.  Harrah’s, Chrysler, Clear Channel Communications, and Freescale Semiconductor have all turned to Chapter 11 or have defaulted on debt.

What Moody’s does not say explicitly is that the problem is bound to get worse. There is little reason to believe that the current credit market is an easy place to get new debt financing, at least not without paying higher rates. There is also no reason to believe that the economic rebound in 2010 is likely to be robust enough to help companies which have cash flow well under their debt service costs.

PE has almost certainly seen its best days. Now the people who run the firms that did the LBOs can spend their time trying to fix companies that were created using a broken model.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Are You Still Paying With a Debit Card?

The average American spends $17,274 on debit cards a year, and it’s a HUGE mistake. First, debit cards don’t have the same fraud protections as credit cards. Once your money is gone, it’s gone. But more importantly you can actually get something back from this spending every time you swipe.

Issuers are handing out wild bonuses right now. With some you can earn up to 5% back on every purchase. That’s like getting a 5% discount on everything you buy!

Our top pick is kind of hard to imagine. Not only does it pay up to 5% back, it also includes a $200 cash back reward in the first six months, a 0% intro APR, and…. $0 annual fee. It’s quite literally free money for any one that uses a card regularly. Click here to learn more!

 

Flywheel Publishing has partnered with CardRatings to provide coverage of credit card products. Flywheel Publishing and CardRatings may receive a commission from card issuers.

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.

AI Portfolio

Discover Our Top AI Stocks

Our expert who first called NVIDIA in 2009 is predicting 2025 will see a historic AI breakthrough.

You can follow him investing $500,000 of his own money on our top AI stocks for free.