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Buyout Firms’ Profit-Goosing Scheme Spurs Backlash From Clients

Buyout Firms' Profit-Goosing Scheme Spurs Backlash From Clients

(Bloomberg) -- Pension funds are taking aim at private equity firms for exploiting a financial sleight of hand that can make even mediocre investments look brilliant.

Discontent has been simmering for a couple of years, but now the California Public Employees’ Retirement System and others are more forcefully pressing their case. The dispute centers on a common -- and legal -- practice: To make an investment, private equity funds are increasingly borrowing against clients’ commitments, then asking for the cash later.

This strategy packs a powerful, if obscure, punch: goosing the reported return on investment. How? It shortens the time that a customer’s actual money is deployed. That changes the math that private equity firms use to calculate their results. Consultant Cambridge Associates figures the approach can inflate a fund’s return by as much as 3 percentage points a year.

Private equity firms say the retirement pools benefit from holding onto their cash longer. They are “pursuing this in droves, like a Black Friday shopping mob,” Andrea Auerbach, head of global private investments research at Cambridge Associates, wrote in a blog post last month.

In contracts over the last year, Calpers, the largest U.S. public pension fund, has tried, so far without success, to eliminate these kinds of loans, known as subscription credit lines, according to people briefed on its concerns who requested anonymity to discuss private conversations. At Calpers, private equity funds reported an average 12.1 percent annual return over the past five years, the most of any major asset class in the fund, which manages about $350 billion on behalf of 1.9 million public employees, retirees and their families.

Buyout Firms’ Profit-Goosing Scheme Spurs Backlash From Clients

APG Group NV, which manages 469 billion euros ($548 billion) on behalf of government and education employees in the Netherlands, is opposed to the growing and what it considers excessive use of the loans by private equity firms, according to people with knowledge of its concerns. Low interest rates are encouraging more private equity firms to borrow aggressively and extend the terms of the loans, these people said.

Some of the biggest private-equity firms, including Apollo Global Management LLC, Ares Management LP, Carlyle Group LP and KKR & Co., have disclosed in securities filings that they use these credit lines, without indicating their precise impact on investment performance. Ares and KKR said their reported returns would generally have been lower without the loans, though they didn’t say by how much.

“KKR provides very specific and detailed information on the use of credit facilities and what the IRR is -- both with and without them -- in our quarterly transparency reports to fund investors,” said spokeswoman Kristi Huller.

Apollo and Carlyle declined to comment, and others either didn’t respond or referred to their filings.

TPG, co-founded by billionaires David Bonderman and Jim Coulter, appears to have been among the most transparent. By using a credit line, TPG was able to boost the “net internal rate of return” on its 2015 buyout fund to 22 percent from 15 percent, as of the end of last year, according to a March fund document viewed by Bloomberg News. TPG declined to comment.

Tough Comparisons

Juicing returns with borrowed money makes it harder for pension funds and other institutions to compare the actual investment skills of private equity funds, according to Oliver Gottschalg, an associate professor at French business school HEC Paris.

“You can have a situation where even after 10 years, a fund is reporting an overstated level of returns,” Gottschalg said. “In more than 15 percent of cases, this could put them into a different performance quartile.”

For their part, private equity groups say such borrowing is merely a short-term tool that helps firms invest money between so-called “capital calls,’’ when institutional investors are required to follow up their commitments with cash. By using credit lines, firms can react quickly and invest in new deals, providing a “win-win” for both institutional investors and the private equity firms, says Jason Mulvihill, general counsel of the American Investment Council, a Washington group that represents private equity firms.

Some customers, such as Karl Polen, chief investment officer of Arizona State Retirement System, agree. He calls the loans an efficient way to manage cash, as long as they’re repaid every three to six months and aren’t used simply to increase returns. The Wyoming Retirement System sees the credit lines as mostly beneficial as well, and appreciates the way they can minimize multiple calls for capital, said a person familiar with the pension.

‘Bad Rap’

“They are getting a bit of a bad rap,” said Zachary Barnett, a partner at law firm Mayer Brown who represents banks that make loans to private equity funds. “Investors are only on the hook for the money they already promised the fund, which would be the case with or without a credit facility.”

Representatives from Wyoming and APG declined to comment. Calpers spokeswoman Megan White declined to comment beyond saying the pension giant backs guidelines from the Institutional Limited Partners Association, which represents private equity fund customers, that call for limited use of borrowing and enhanced disclosure.

Still, even some within the private equity world acknowledge their own risk in investing with borrowed money. What happens if the customer can’t actually come up with the cash later? Oaktree Capital Group LLC, one of the largest alternative asset managers, is developing guidelines it expects to help mitigate those risks, which could arise during a financial crisis.

Hidden Risk

“It’s mostly during crises that weaknesses are exposed,” Howard Marks, co-chairman of Oaktree, wrote last year in a memo to clients.

For now, it’s unclear whether the pension funds will be able to change this practice. Private equity firms, which took in a record $453 billion last year, are being flooded with money and can basically dictate their terms. Customers are then forced to make decisions with incomplete information on a fund’s performance, said Jennifer Choi, managing director of industry affairs for the private-equity customer group.

Private equity funds “are telling you what the terms of trade are to participate,” Ashby Monk, a researcher on pension and sovereign wealth fund design at Stanford University’s Global Projects Center, told the Calpers board in Sacramento last month. “They are using scarcity. They’re using side letters. They’re using more tricks than I could probably fit into a 20-minute conversation.”

--With assistance from Gillian Tan.

To contact the reporters on this story: Heather Perlberg in Washington at hperlberg@bloomberg.net;Sabrina Willmer in Boston at swillmer2@bloomberg.net;John Gittelsohn in Los Angeles at johngitt@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Margaret Collins at mcollins45@bloomberg.net, ;David Papadopoulos at papadopoulos@bloomberg.net, Josh Friedman, John Hechinger

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