Strong Buyout Fund Returns Drive Private Equity Stocks Higher

Private equity

Over the past decade, as private equity firms like Blackstone, KKR and Carlyle Group have grown into a gargantuan size and raised buyout funds nearing or eclipsing $20 billion, one critique of their cash gusher was that it would inevitably drive fund returns lower. Now, as the U.S. economy emerges from the Coronavirus pandemic and markets soar to new record highs, recent earning results from America’s big buyout firms reveal a trend of rising returns even as funds surged in size.

Fueled by piping-hot financial markets, returns from the flagship private equity funds of Blackstone, KKR and Carlyle are on the rise. Mega funds from these firms that recently ended their investment period are all running ahead of their prior vintages and raise the prospect that PE firms can achieve net investment return rates nearing or exceeding 20%.

Carlyle, which reported first quarter earnings on Thursday morning, is the newest firm to exhibit rising performance. Its $13 billion North American buyout fund, Carlyle Partners VI, which was launched in 2014 and ended its investment period in 2018, is now being marked at a 21% gross investment rate of return and a net return of 16%, or a 2.2-times multiple on invested capital.

The fund has realized $8.8 billion of investments, like insurance brokerage PIB Group and consultancy PA Consulting, and sits on a portfolio marked at nearly $20 billion. The returns are two-to-three percentage points ahead of Carlyle Partners V, the flagship buyout fund it raised just before the financial crisis. That fund is on track to earn a net IRR of of 14%, or a multiple of 2.1-times its invested capital.

Rising fund profitability, even at scale, is helping to fuel Carlyle’s overall profitability. Net accrued performance fees from Carlyle VI ended the quarter at nearly $1.4 billion and Carlyle sits on a record $3.2 billion in such performance fees that will likely be fully realized in 2021. The firm’s once-lagging stock has recently risen to new record highs.

The trend is even more clear at Blackstone and KKR, which have both used spongy IPO markets to realize multi-billion dollar investment windfalls in recent months.

Blackstone’s flagship $18 billion private equity fund, Blackstone Capital Partners VII, was closed in May 2016 and ended its investment period in February 2020, just before the Covid-19 economic meltdown. After taking public or exiting investments like Bumble, Paysafe and Refinitiv, this fund is now marked at a 18% net investment rate of return, five percentage points better than its prior fund, which raised in the aftermath of the 2008 crisis.

In the past two quarters, the fund has been the single biggest driver of Blackstone’s record profitability, generating over $1.6 billion in combined accrued performance fees. In the first quarter, the fund was responsible for 82-cents in quarterly per-share profits, filings show. Overall, Blackstone sits on a record $5.2 billion in net accrued performance fees.

At KKR, it’s a similar story. The firm’s $8.8 billion Americas XI fund, which was raised in 2012 and ended its investment period in 2017, is generating net IRRs of 18.5%, or a 2.2-times multiple on invested capital, according to the its annual 10-k filing from February. That sets up the fund to be KKR’s most profitable buyout fund since the 1990s.

KKR’s first quarter results, set to be released in early May, may show even bigger windfalls and higher returns. Its recent public offering of Applovin looks to be one of the greatest windfalls in the firm’s history, bolstering returns and profits for its even newer $13.5 billion Americas Fund XII. Asia could also be an area of big returns as its $9 billion Asian Fund III monetizes investments.

As returns rise, PE firms have seen their stocks soar to new record highs.

Once a laggard, Carlyle is up 36% year-to-date to a new record high above $42, according to Morningstar data. The firm, now led by chief executive Kewsong Lee, has returned an annual average of 23% over the past five-years.

KKR has done even better, rising 40% this year alone and 125% over the past 12-months. It’s five and ten-year total stock returns are now 33% and 13.5%, respectively.

The top performer in the industry is Blackstone Group, which recently eclipsed a $100 billion market value. Up 39% this year alone, Blackstone’s generated an average annualized total return of nearly 19% over the past decade, which is about five-percentage-points better annually than the S&P 500 Index.

Bottom Line: With public markets hitting new record highs, buyout firms are reporting LBO returns not seen since the 1990s. Their stocks, which once badly lagged the S&P 500, are beginning to beat the market.

I’m a staff writer and associate editor at Forbes, where I cover finance and investing. My beat includes hedge funds, private equity, fintech, mutual funds, mergers, and banks. I’m a graduate of Middlebury College and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, and I’ve worked at TheStreet and Businessweek. Before becoming a financial scribe, I was a member of the fateful 2008 analyst class at Lehman Brothers. Email thoughts and tips to agara@forbes.com. Follow me on Twitter at @antoinegara

Source: Strong Buyout Fund Returns Drive Private Equity Stocks Higher

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The Funds With The Smartest Investors, And The Funds With The Dumbest

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Are mutual fund investors impulsive? Do they jump into a fund after a winning streak and then sell out, in despair, after a bad stretch?

I tested this hypothesis by going to Morningstar MORN , the securities analysis outfit in Chicago. The Morningstar Direct database, the version of its service sold to investment pros, has performance details that shed light on timing decisions by fund buyers.

The answer to the question: Yes, fund clients are impulsive. Bad timing causes them to earn considerably less than they would have earned by buying and holding. On funds of domestic stocks, they’re throwing away something like $54 billion a year.

The key to this analysis is a number that Morningstar calls “investor return.” It measures the average results taken home, as opposed to the performance of the fund.

The usual performance number reported for a fund assumes a hypothetical buyer putting a single sum of money in at the beginning and leaving it untouched until the end of some measurement period, like a decade. Example: The Schwab 1000 Index fund delivered a 233% cumulative performance over the ten years to May 31. That amounts to a compound annual 12.8%.

The investor return on this index fund is a bit less, at 12.6%. This figure takes into account the monthly flows of money into and out of the fund. More precisely: If fund shareholders had been earning a constant 12.6% on every dollar they kept in play, they would have wound up with the fund’s ending assets. In short, the 12.6% measures average investor experience.

Where does the 0.2% shortfall come from? It means that buyers of this fund had a slight tendency to add money, or to take it off the table, at the wrong times. We’re human. After a bullish run we’re in love with stocks and buy more—maybe near a top. A correction in stocks makes bonds more appealing and we hold back, just when stocks are a bargain.

The mistakes among Schwab’s clientele pale in comparison to those of fund buyers generally. Morningstar has 827 domestic-stock funds with both ten years of history and sufficient detail on asset balances to permit a calculation of investor return. At 527 of those funds, not quite two-thirds of them, timing decisions lowered the annualized gains experienced.

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Among all 827 funds the average impact, with both positive and negative impacts included, was a loss of 0.64% a year. Keep that up for 30 years and you shortchange a $1 million retirement portfolio by $175,000.

It is important to understand what Morningstar is measuring. A shortfall does not occur when a customer is invested for only a portion of the ten-year period, since both the reported performance figure and the investor return are compound annual percentages. (Morningstar’s investor number is an internal rate of return. For an explanation of how that arithmetic works, see this article on how to compare your results to a yardstick.)

A shortfall will show up, though, if people jump into a style or sector after an upswing, only to be disappointed and then move into another kind of fund that seems to be the new ticket to wealth. Such performance chasing depresses investor returns at both funds.

Some funds have customers who are either lucky or smart. Their timing is good. They do better than the performance figures indicate.

These ten funds all beat the market, as measured by the Schwab index fund, and had customers who improved on those good results by being invested at the right times:

Noteworthy on this list are two funds from the Kayne Anderson Rudnick subsidiary of Virtus Investment Partners VRTS . KAR leans toward concentrated, quirky portfolios of stocks like Teladoc Health and Morningstar. (Forbes profile here.)

Winning funds with well-timed investor moves are the exception. More common: funds where investor flailing depresses gains. These ten underperformed the market and had customers who magnified the damage with their stumbling:

I asked the operators of the second group of funds for comments and got one, from Needham:

“Our mission is to create wealth for long-term investors. Those who trade mutual funds or try to time the market may see returns that are less than those who stay invested and have been rewarded with excellent long-term returns.”

Moral of this story on investor returns: Follow Needham’s advice. Invest with enough conviction that you can stay put.

And if your attention is fleeting? Maybe you should discontinue the search for market beaters and just own an index fund.

Here’s one more statistic from that Morningstar data set. The average investor experience in the 827 funds was a compound annual 10.5%. That’s 2.3 points less than the return on the Schwab 1000 fund. This shortfall comes from both bad timing by customers and a parallel flailing by the funds. In their struggle to beat the market the fund managers ran up trading costs as well as their own management expenses.

Yes, 2.3% is a gigantic loss. Keep it up for 30 years and you cut your $1 million retirement in half.

Follow me on Twitter.

I aim to help you save on taxes and money management costs. I graduated from Harvard in 1973, have been a journalist for 45 years, and was editor of Forbes magazine from 1999 to 2010. Tax law is a frequent subject in my articles. I have been an Enrolled Agent since 1979. Email me at williambaldwinfinance — at — gmail — dot — com.

Source: https://www.forbes.com

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4 Fun Ways for Millennials to Dip Their Toes Into Investing

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Calling all millennials: How much of your money is in equity or invested somewhere? Sure, there may be a savings account in a mutual fund somewhere nice and safe that your parents set up for you on your 18th birthday, but knowledge about investing and the stock market isn’t as widespread as you’d think. In fact, a recent study found that less than half of affluent (i.e. money-making, employed and educated) millennials feel knowledgeable about investing at all. That includes setting aside money for retirement. While knowledge about how to navigate the stock market is nebulous, there’s also a gap in how to acquire knowledge, and 21 percent of non-investors say that they don’t invest because they don’t trust financial advisors or stockbrokers.

Still, millennials have the most opportunity on their hands (Gen Z, too) to make a killing in the stock market if they invest sooner rather than later. It’s a long game due to the compounding effect. So, for millennials who don’t yet have the knowledge or understanding to get started in investing in a major way, here are four fun ways to dip their toe in and understand how it works. Who knows? Beginning with one of these steps today may make you a fortune later.

1. Use a DIY platform

There are many investing platforms that can create personalized investing portfolios so you can learn as you go. Take Ellevest, which features 21 asset classes and creates a portfolio based on the amount of risk you want to take. For female-identifying millennials, this is a great first place to get started, because you can invest as little as $20 and add a recurring contribution and edit your timeline as you go. Platforms like this help you experiment within your budget, allocating your money in different ways to reach your goal and learn simultaneously.

Related: How to Start Investing

2. Invest in something that interests you

Big investing buzzwords can be intimidating at first, which is all the more reason to invest in something you’re already familiar with, so it feels less foreign. This will create a sense of personal investment and interest, too. This could span from investing in a friend’s Kickstarter for a product you believe in to using a platform like Vinovest, which allows users to buy and sell fine wine without having to store the inventory in their homes.

At the same time, an investment of this type can be fun and different — a conversation starter. Already having an interest in one industry sector or type of product can also incentivize further research on the topic, which can only pay off as far as investment decisions go.

3. Invest in something that’s part of a global conversation

Investing in something like cryptocurrency can be another learn-as-you-go alternative. Many millennials enjoy taking part in the conversation around the different types of cryptocurrency on Reddit and Twitter, where they can crowdsource information, make friends and educate themselves in a more social way. Apps like Coinbase make this easy, where everything from Bitcoin to Ethereum is available to purchase and sell at a moment’s notice, which is how many millennials begin to play with trading. These are valuable skills that can translate to the stock market later on.

4. Do a convertible loan

The nature of a convertible loan means that a term is created for a loan for a startup or business, and the loan will be returned with a small interest fee, with the option to turn the debt into equity. For millennials in the startup sphere interested in business or working in venture capital, this is a great way to begin the process of startup investing while also giving the startup a year to perform before deciding whether to invest or take back their loan money with the small interest rate accrued. This can also be a great opportunity to learn about key terms and KPIs regarding business growth and what investors should look for in startup performance.

Each of these four ideas provide an educational glimpse into the world of investing, with a slightly smaller margin of risk for beginners. The best way to learn is through doing, so millennials just need to start playing with their disposable income to learn the ropes.

By

Source: https://www.entrepreneur.com

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