Sunday, November 23, 2008

"said they were confident the markets would recover to pre-credit crunch levels within 18 months."

Here's an important post from the FT:

"Two-thirds of private equity bosses have stopped investing amid the crisis in financial markets, preferring to wait for the economic downturn to throw up more attractive deals, according to a survey published on Monday."

This is an important sign. It's bad news for right now, but good news going forward. The investors are clearly looking to get back in at the right price. That's progress.

"More than half of the 220 senior private equity executives questioned by the Economist Intelligence Unit across Europe and the US said they were confident the markets would recover to pre-credit crunch levels within 18 months."

I agree with this.

"However, 96 per cent of the buy-out chiefs thought their industry would have to change in response to the turmoil in the financial markets, according to the survey, commissioned by Celerant Consulting. One-fifth said the industry needed a new financing model.

Private equity groups – which use a mixture of investor funds and risky loans to buy companies – have been hamstrung by the turmoil, which has made it much harder to raise debt"

No. I wouldn't invest in these.

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