PublicWire | Emerging Market Stock News
  •  Home
  • Technology
  • Medical
  • Energy
  • Cannabis
  • Finance
  • Retail
  • General
  • Podcast
  • Videos
  • Services
  •  Home
  • Technology
  • Medical
  • Energy
  • Cannabis
  • Finance
  • Retail
  • General
  • Podcast
  • Videos
  • Services
No Result
View All Result
PublicWire
No Result
View All Result

Home » Finance » Private equity/IRRs: benchmark too often benefits buyout bosses

Private equity/IRRs: benchmark too often benefits buyout bosses

by PublicWire
October 25, 2021
in Finance
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0

Private equity has some cerebral new opponents. Business academics increasingly criticise buyout groups for high fees, misaligned incentives and returns that may be mediocre or opaque. Stanford University researchers are the latest to take a swipe. In a recent paper, they spotlight the weaknesses of “internal rates of return”, the profitability benchmarks the industry markets itself with.

IRRs have the benefit of simplicity. Cash inflows and outflows for a private equity fund are mapped then reduced to a single percentage that can be benchmarked against other asset classes.

But in a recent study titled “An Economic Case for Transparency in Private Equity” the authors pointed out how misleading IRRs can be. For example, modest differences in the timing of similar underlying cash flows can lead to widely differing IRRs.

Another original sin in private equity has been high pay for poor performance. IRRs are implicated. In many funds, managers only earn performance fees when IRRs exceed a hurdle rate. This is meant to align incentives. But when managers are desperate to beat their targets, the mechanism can encourage massaging of numbers and excessive risk taking.

Such critiques irritate rather than constrain the Masters of the Universe. Private capital keeps growing. Wealth funds and government pension schemes are allocating growing sums to the alternative asset industry. This now has about $5tn of “dry powder” — as cash for investment is called. The likes of California state retirement fund Calpers have been tilting allocations away from public markets.

The researchers hope to create a more holistic and granular standard for private equity returns. This would be based on factors broader than a single percentage. The academics advocate building computer models that permit micro analysis of deal risk, conflicts and profitability.

In recent years, pension schemes have been engulfed in scandals about “pay-to-play” clauses over rescue financings. Some have simply lost track of fees paid to private equity managers. Overwhelmed bean counters at state pension offices need to get a better handle on the basics of their job. After that, they can start thinking about replacing IRRs with better benchmarks.

The Lex team is interested in hearing more from readers. Please tell us what you think of the Stanford researchers’ criticisms of IRRs in the comments section below.


This post was originally published on this site

Previous Post

Just Eat Takeaway rebuffs call to sell Grubhub

Next Post

Do Power Companies Need More Incentive To Speed Up Their Move To Clean Energy?

PublicWire

At PublicWire, we know the vast majority of all investors conduct their due diligence and get their news online in a variety of ways including email, social media, financial websites, text messages, RSS feeds and audio/video podcasts. PublicWire’s financial communications program is uniquely positioned to reach these investors throughout the U.S. and Canada as well as on a global scale.

Related Posts

Finance

South Korea ‘reviewing various plans’ to stabilise the won

September 15, 2022
0
Finance

European shares edge higher as investors weigh up policy outlook

September 15, 2022
0
Finance

Ethereum ‘Merge’ concludes in key moment for crypto market

September 15, 2022
0
Finance

EU embargo to hit Russian oil output, IEA says

September 14, 2022
0
Finance

European stocks slide after sharp Wall Street sell-off overnight

September 14, 2022
0
Finance

Terry Smith to close emerging markets investment trust

September 14, 2022
0
Next Post

Do Power Companies Need More Incentive To Speed Up Their Move To Clean Energy?

Please login to join discussion

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Loading
Ad
PublicWire | Emerging Market Stock News 24/7 | Investor Relations US Stock Market

© Copyright 2022 publicwire.com

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Watch LIVE
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Services
  • Contributors

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • LIVE Investor News Channel
  • Cannabis
  • Energy
  • Finance
  • General
  • Medical
  • Podcasts
  • Retail
  • Technology
  • Videos

© Copyright 2022 publicwire.com

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.