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Acquisition - The process of taking over a controlling interest
in another company. Acquisition also describes
any deal where the bidder ends up with 50 per
cent or more of the company taken over.
Acquisition
finance - Companies often need to use external
finance to fund an acquisition. This can be in
the form of bank debt and/or equity, such as a
share issue.
Advisory
board - An advisory board is common among
smaller companies. It is less formal than the
board of directors. It usually consists of people,
chosen by the company founders, whose experience,
knowledge and influence can benefit the growth
and direction of the business. The board will
meet periodically but does not have any legal
responsibilities in regard to the company.
Alternative
assets - This term describes non-traditional
asset classes. They include private equity, venture
capital, hedge funds and real estate. Alternative
assets are generally more risky than traditional
assets, but they should, in theory, generate higher
returns for investors.
Angel
investor - See business
angels
Asset -
Anything owned by an individual, a business or
financial institution that has a present or future
value i.e. can be turned into cash. In accounting
terms, an asset is something of future economic
benefit obtained as a result of previous transactions.
Tangible assets can be land and buildings, fixtures
and fittings; examples of intangible assets are
goodwill, patents and copyrights.
Asset
allocation - The percentage breakdown of an
investment portfolio. This shows how the investment
is divided among different asset classes. These
classes include shares, bonds, property, cash
and overseas investments. Institutions structure
their allocation to balance risk and ensure they
have a diversified portfolio. The asset classes
produce a range of returns - for example, bonds
provide a low but steady return, equities a higher
but riskier return. Cash has a guaranteed return.
Effective asset allocation maximises returns while
covering liabilities.
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Balanced
fund - A fund that spreads its investments
between various types of assets such as stocks
and bonds. Investors can avoid excessive risk
by balancing their investments in this manner,
but should expect only moderate returns.
Benchmark - This is a standard measure used to assess the
performance of a company. Investors need to know
whether or not a company is hitting certain benchmarks
as this will determine the structure of the investment
package. For example, a company that is slow to
reach certain benchmarks may compensate investors
by increasing their stock allocation.
BIMBO 'buy-in
management buy-out' - A BIMBO enables a company
to re-shuffle its allocation of share capital
to bring about a change in management. Internally,
a group of managers will acquire enough share
capital to 'buy out' the company from within.
An outside team of managers will simultaneously
'buy in' to the company management. Both parties
may require financial assistance from venture
capitalists in order to achieve this end.
Bond - a
type of IOU issued by companies or institutions.
They generally have a fixed interest rate and
maturity value, so they're very low risk - much
less risky than buying equity - but their returns
are accordingly low.
Bridge
loan - a kind of short-term financing that
allows a company to continue running until it
can arrange longer-term financing. Companies sometimes
seek this because they run out of cash before
they receive long-term funding; sometimes they
do so to strengthen their balance sheet in the
run up to flotation.
Burn rate - the rate at which a start-up uses its venture
capital funding before it begins earning any revenue.
Business
angels - individuals who provide seed or start-up
finance to entrepreneurs in return for equity.
Angels usually contribute a lot more than pure
cash - they often have industry knowledge and
contacts that they can pass on to entrepreneurs.
Angels sometimes have non-executive directorships
in the companies they invest in.
Buy-out - This is the purchase of a company or a controlling
interest of a corporation's shares. This often
happens when a company's existing managers wish
to take control of the company. See management buy-out
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Capital
call - see drawdown
Capital
drawdown - see drawdown
Capital
commitment - Every investor in a private equity
fund commits to investing a specified sum of money
in the fund partnership over a specified period
of time. The fund records this as the limited
partnership's capital commitment. The sum of capital
commitments is equal to the size of the fund. Limited
partners and the general
partner must make a capital commitment
to participate in the fund.
Capital
distribution - These are the returns that
an investor in a private equity fund receives.
It is the income and capital realised from investments
less expenses and liabilities. Once a limited
partner has had their cost of investment returned,
further distributions are actual profit. The partnership
agreement determines the timing of distributions
to the limited partner. It will also determine
how profits are divided among the limited
partners and general
partner.
Capital
gain - When an asset is sold for more than
the initial purchase cost, the profit is known
as the capital gain. This is the opposite to capital
loss, which occurs when an asset is sold for less
than the initial purchase price. Capital gain
refers strictly to the gain achieved once an asset
has been sold - an unrealised capital gain refers
to an asset that could potentially produce a gain
if it was sold. An investor will not necessarily
receive the full value of the capital gain - capital
gains are often taxed; the exact amount will depend
on the specific tax regime.
Capital
under management - This is the amount of capital
that the fund has at its disposal, and is managing,
for investment purposes.
Captive
firm - A private equity firm that is
tied to a larger organisation, typically a bank,
insurance company or corporate.
Carried
interest - The share of profits that the fund
manager is due once it has returned the cost of
investment to investors. Carried interest is normally
expressed as a percentage of the total profits
of the fund. The industry norm is 20 per cent.
The fund manager will normally therefore receive
20 per cent of the profits generated by the fund
and distribute the remaining 80 per cent of the
profits to investors.
Catch up - A clause that allows the general partner to
take, for a limited period of time, a greater
share of the carried interest than would normally
be allowed. This continues until the time when
the carried
interest allocation, as agreed in the
limited partnership, has been reached. This usually
occurs when a fund has agreed a preferred return
to investors - a fund may return the cost of investment,
plus some other profits, to investors early.
Clawback - A clawback provision ensures that a general
partner does not receive more than its agreed
percentage of carried
interest over the life of the fund. So,
for example, if a general partner receives 21
percent of the partnership's profits instead of
the agreed 20 per cent, limited partners can claw
back the extra one per cent.
Closing - This term can be confusing. If a fund-raising
firm announces it has reached first or second
closing, it doesn't mean that it is not seeking
further investment. When fund raising, a firm
will announce a first closing to release or drawdown the money raised so far so that it can start investing.
A fund may have many closings, but the usual number
is around three. Only when a firm announces a
final closing is it no longer open to new investors.
Co-investment - Although used loosely to describe any two
parties that invest alongside each other in the
same company, this term has a special meaning
when referring to limited partners in a fund.
If a limited partner in a fund has co-investment
rights, it can invest directly in a company that
is also backed by the private equity fund. The
institution therefore ends up with two separate
stakes in the company - one indirectly through
the fund; one directly in the company. Some private
equity firms offer co-investment rights to encourage
institutions to invest in their funds.
The advantage for an institution
is that it should see a higher return than if
it invested all its private equity allocation
in funds - it doesn't have to pay a management
fee and won't see at least 20 per cent of its
return swallowed by a fund's carried interest.
But to co-invest successfully, institutions need
to have sufficient knowledge of the market to
assess whether a co-investment opportunity is
a good one.
Company
buy-back - The process by which a company
buys back the stake held by a financial investor,
such as a private equity firm. This is one exit route
for private equity funds.
Corporate
venturing - This is the process by which large
companies invest in smaller companies. They usually
do this for strategic reasons. For example, a
large corporate such as Nokia may invest in smaller
technology companies that are developing new products
that can be assimilated into the Nokia product
range. A large pharmaceutical company might invest
in R&D centres on the basis that they get
first refusal of research findings.
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Debt
financing - This is raising money for working
capital or capital expenditure through some form
of loan. This could be by arranging a bank loan
or by selling bonds, bills or notes (forms of
debt) to individuals or institutional investors.
In return for lending the money, the individuals
or institutions become creditors and receive a
promise to repay principal plus interest on the
debt.
Distressed
debt (otherwise known as vulture capital) - This is a form of finance used to purchase the
corporate bonds of companies that have either
filed for bankruptcy or appear likely to do so.
Private equity firms and other corporate financiers
who buy distressed debt don't asset-strip and
liquidate the companies they purchase. Instead,
they can make good returns by restoring them to
health and then prosperity. These buyers first
become a major creditor of the target company.
This gives them leverage to play a prominent role
in the reorganisation or liquidation stage.
Distribution - see capital
distribution
Distribution
in specie/Distribution in kind - This can
happen if an investment has resulted in an IPO. A limited
partner may receive its return in the
form of stock or securities instead of cash. This
can be controversial. The stock may not be liquid
and limited partners can be left with shares that
are worth a fraction of the amount they would
have received in cash. There can also be restrictions
in the US about how soon a limited partner can
sell the stock (Rule 144). This means that sometimes
the share value has decreased by the time the
limited partner is legally allowed to sell.
Dividend
cover - A dividend is the amount of a company's
profits paid to shareholders each year. Dividend
cover is the calculation used to show how much
of a company's after-tax profit is being used
to finance the dividend. The formula is: Dividend
Cover = (Earnings per share/Dividend per share).
Drawdown - When a venture capital firm has decided where
it would like to invest, it will approach its
own investors in order to draw down the money.
The money will already have been pledged to the
fund but this is the actual act of transferring
the money so that it reaches the investment target.
Dry Close (Dry Closing) -
A dry close is when a private equity firm raises
money for a fund early on in the cycle, but then
agrees to not levy any management fees on the
money raised from its Limited Partners until it
actually begins investing the fund. Most private
equity firms will start raising a new fund when
their current fund is around 70% invested. Venture
firms tend to raise new funds earlier than buy-out
firms, because they usually need to invest in
follow-on rounds for their portfolio firms.
Due Diligence - Investing successfully
in private equity at a fund or company level,
involves thorough investigation. As a long-term
investment, it is essential to review and analyse
all aspects of the deal before signing. Capabilities
of the management team, performance record, deal
flow, investment strategy and legals, are examples
of areas that are fully examined during the due
diligence process.
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Early-stage
finance - This is the realm of the venture
capital - as opposed to the private equity - firm.
A venture capitalist will normally invest in a
company when it is in an early stage of development.
This means that the company has only recently
been established, or is still in the process of
being established - it needs capital to develop
and to become profitable. Early-stage finance
is risky because it's often unclear how the market
will respond to a new company's concept. However,
if the venture is successful, the venture capitalist's
return is correspondingly high.
Equity
financing - Companies seeking to raise finance
may use equity financing instead of or in addition
to debt financing. To raise equity finance, a
company creates new ordinary shares and sells
them for cash. The new share owners become part-owners
of the company and share in the risks and rewards
of the company's business.
Evergreen
fund - A fund in which the returns generated
by its investments are automatically channelled
back into the fund rather than being distributed
back to investors. The aim is to keep a continuous
supply of capital available for further investments.
Exit - Private
equity professionals have their eye on the exit
from the moment they first see a business plan.
An exit is the means by which a fund is able to
realise its investment in a company - by an initial
public offering, a trade sale, selling to another
private equity firm or a company
buy-back. If a fund manager can't see
an obvious exit route in a potential investment,
then it won't touch it. Funds have the power to
force an investee company to sell up so they can
exit the investment and make their profit, but
venture capitalists claim this is rare - the exit
is usually agreed with the company's management
team.
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First
time fund - This is the first fund a private
equity firm ever raises - whether the firm is
made up of managers who have never raised a fund
before or, as in many cases, the firm is a spin-off,
where managers from different, established funds
have joined forces to create their own, new firm.
In the first instance, the managers do not have
a track record so investing with them can be very risky. In the
second instance, the managers will have track
records from their previous firms, but the investment
is still risky because the individuals are unlikely
to have worked together as a team before.
Follow-on
funding - Companies often require several
rounds of funding. If a private equity firm has
invested in a particular company in the past,
and then provides additional funding at a later
stage, this is known as 'follow-on funding'.
Fund
of funds - A fund set up to distribute investments
among a selection of private equity fund managers,
who in turn invest the capital directly. Fund
of funds are specialist private equity investors
and have existing relationships with firms. They
may be able to provide investors with a route
to investing in particular funds that would otherwise
be closed to them. Investing in fund of funds
can also help spread the risk of investing in
private equity because they invest the capital
in a variety of funds.
Fund
raising - The process by which a private equity
firm solicits financial commitments from limited
partners for a fund. Firms typically set a target
when they begin raising the fund and ultimately
announce that the fund has closed at such-and-such
amount. This may mean that no additional capital
will be accepted. But sometimes the firms will
have multiple interim closings each time they have hit particular targets (first
closings, second closings, etc.) and final closings.
The term cap is the maximum amount of capital
a firm will accept in its fund.
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Gatekeeper - Specialist advisers who assist institutional
investors in their private equity allocation decisions.
Institutional investors with little experience
of the asset class or those with limited resources
often use them to help manage their private equity
allocation. Gatekeepers usually offer tailored
services according to their clients' needs, including
private equity fund sourcing and due diligence
through to complete discretionary mandates. Most
gatekeepers also manage funds
of funds.
General partner - This can
refer to the top-ranking partners at a private
equity firm as well as the firm managing the private
equity fund.
General
partner contribution/commitment - The amount
of capital that the fund manager contributes to
its own fund. This is an important way for limited
partners to ensure that their interests are aligned
with those of the general partner. The US Department
of Treasury recently removed the legal requirement
of the general partner to contribute at least
one per cent of fund capital, but this is still
the usual contribution.

Holding
period - This is the length of time that
an investment is held. For example, if Company
A invests in Company B in June 1996 and then sells
its stake in June 1999, the holding period is
three years.
Hurdle
Rate - see preferred
return
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Incubator - An entity designed to nurture business ideas
or new technologies to the point that they become
attractive to venture capitalists. An incubator
typically provides physical space and some or
all of the services - legal, managerial, technical
- needed for a business idea to be developed.
Private equity firms often back incubators as
a way of generating early-stage investment opportunities.
Institutional
buy-out (IBO) - If a private equity firm takes
a majority stake in a management buy-out,
the deal is an institutional buy-out. This is
also the term given to a deal in which a private
equity firm acquires a company out right and then
allocates the incumbent and/or incoming management
a stake in the business.
Initial public
offering (IPO) - An IPO is the official term
for 'going public'. It occurs when a privately
held company - owned, for example, by its founders
plus perhaps its private equity investors - lists
a proportion of its shares on a stock exchange.
IPOs are an exit route
for private equity firms. Companies that do an
IPO are often relatively small and new and are
seeking equity capital to expand their businesses.
Internal rate
of return (IRR) - This is the most appropriate
performance benchmark for private equity investments.
In simple terms, it is a time-weighted return
expressed as a percentage. IRR uses the present
sum of cash drawdowns (money invested), the present value of distributions (money returned from investments) and the current
value of unrealised investments and applies a
discount.
The general
partner's carried interest may be dependent
on the IRR. If so, investors should get a third
party to verify the IRR calculations.
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Later
stage finance - Capital that private equity
firms generally provide to established, medium-sized
companies that are breaking even or trading profitably.
The company uses the capital to finance strategic
moves, such as expansion, growth, acquisitions
and management
buy-outs.
Lead
investor - The firm or individual that organises
a round of financing, and usually contributes
the largest amount of capital to the deal.
Leveraged buy-out
(LBO) - The acquisition of a company using
debt and equity finance. As the word leverage
implies, more debt than equity is used to finance
the purchase, eg 90 per cent debt to ten per cent
equity. Normally, the assets of the company being
acquired are put up as collateral to secure the
debt.
Limited
partners - Institutions or individuals that
contribute capital to a private equity fund. LPs
typically include pension funds, insurance companies,
asset management firms and fund of fund investors.
Limited
partnership - The standard vehicle for investment
in private equity funds. A limited partnership
has a fixed life, usually of ten years. The partnership's general
partner makes investments, monitors them
and finally exits them
for a return on behalf the investors - limited
partners. The GP usually invests the partnership's
funds within three to five years and, for the
fund's remaining life, the GP attempts to achieve
the highest possible return for each of the investments
by exiting. Occasionally, the limited partnership
will have investments that run beyond the fund's
life. In this case, partnerships can be extended
to ensure that all investments are realised. When
all investments are fully divested, a limited
partnership can be terminated or 'wound up'.
Lock-up
period - A provision in the underwriting agreement
between an investment bank and existing shareholders
that prohibits corporate insiders and private
equity investors from selling at IPO.
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Management buy-in
(MBI) - When a team of managers buys into
a company from outside, taking a majority stake,
it is likely to need private equity financing.
An MBI is likely to happen if the internal management
lacks expertise or the funding needed to 'buy
out' the company from within. It can also happen
if there are succession issues - in family businesses,
for example, there may be nobody available to
take over the management of the company. An MBI
can be slightly riskier than a MBO because
the new management will not be as familiar with
the way the company works.
Management buy-out
(MBO) - A private equity firm will often provide
finance to enable current operating management
to acquire or to buy at least 50 per cent of the
business they manage. In return, the private equity
firm usually receives a stake in the business.
This is one of the least risky types of private
equity investment because the company is already
established and the managers running it know the
business - and the market it operates in - extremely
well.
Management
fee - This is the annual fee paid to the general
partner. It is typically a percentage
of limited partner commitments to the fund and
is meant to cover the basic costs of running and
administering a fund. Management fees tend to
run in the 1.5 per cent to 2.5 per cent range,
and often scale down in the later years of a partnership
to reflect the GP's reduced workload. The management
fee is not intended to incentivise the investment
team - carried
interest rewards managers for performance.
Mezzanine
financing - This is the term associated
with the middle layer of financing in leveraged
buy-outs. In its simplest form, this is a type
of loan finance that sits between equity and secured
debt. Because the risk with mezzanine financing
is higher than with senior debt, the interest
charged by the provider will be higher than that
charged by traditional lenders, such as banks.
However, equity provision – through warrants or
options – is sometimes incorporated into the deal.
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Portfolio - A private equity firm will invest in several
companies, each of which is known as a portfolio
company. The spread of investments into the various
target companies is referred to as the portfolio.
Portfolio
company – This is one of the companies
backed by a private equity firm.
Placement
agent - Placement agents are specialists
in marketing and promoting private equity funds
to institutional investors. They typically charge
two per cent of any capital they help to raise
for the fund.
Preferred
return - This is the minimum amount of
return that is distributed to the limited partners
until the time when the general partner is eligible
to deduct carried
interest. The preferred return ensures
that the general partner shares in the profits
of the partnership only after investments have
performed well.
Private
equity This refers to the holding of
stock in unlisted companies – companies that are
not quoted on a stock exchange. It includes forms
of venture capital and MBO financing.
Private
markets - A term used in the US to refer
to private equity investments.
Private
placement - When securities are sold
without a public offering, this is referred to
as a private placement. Generally, this means
that the stock is placed with a select number
of private investors.
Public
to private - This is when a quoted company
is taken into private ownership – more recently
by private equity firms. Historically, this has
involved a large company selling one of its divisions.
A new trend has been for whole companies to be
bought out and subsequently delisted.
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Ratchets
- This is a structure that determines
the eventual equity allocation between groups
of shareholders. A ratchet enables a management
team to increase its share of equity in a company
if the company is performing well. The equity
allocation in a company varies, depending on the
performance of the company and the rate of return
that the private equity firm achieves.
Recapitalisation
- This refers to a change in the way
a company is financed. It is the result of an
injection of capital, either through raising debt
or equity.
Secondaries - The term for the market for interests in venture
capital and private equity limited partnerships
from the original investors, who are seeking liquidity
of their investment before the limited partnership
terminates. An original investor might want to
sell its stake in a private equity firm for a
variety of reasons: it needs liquidity, it has
changed investment strategy or focus or it needs
to re-balance its portfolio. The main advantage
for investors looking at secondaries is that they
can invest in private equity funds over a shorter
period than they could with primaries.
Secondary
buy-out - A common exit strategy. This
type of buy-out happens when an investment firm's
holding in a private company is sold to another
investor. For example, one venture capital firm
might sell its stake in a private company to another
venture capital firm.
Secondary
market - the market for secondary buy-outs.
This term should not be confused with secondaries.
Second
stage funding - the provision of capital
to a company that has entered the production and
growth stage although may not be making a profit
yet. It is often at this stage that venture capitalists
become involved in the financing.
Seed
capital - the provision of very early
stage finance to a company with a business venture
or idea that has not yet been established. Capital
is often provided before venture capitalists become
involved. However, a small number of venture capitalists
do provide seed capital.
Sliding
fee scale - A management fee that varies
over the life of a partnership.
Spin-out
firms - These are captive or semi-captive firms that gain independence from
their parent organisations.
Strategic
investment - An investment that a corporation
makes in a young company that can bring something
of value to the corporation itself. The aim may
be to gain access to a particular product or technology
that the start-up company is developing, or to
support young companies that could become customers
for the corporation's products. In venture capital
rounds, strategic investors are sometimes distinguished
from venture capitalists and others who invest
primarily with the aim of generating a large return
on their investment. Corporate
venturing is an example of strategic investing.
Syndication - The sharing of deals between two or more investors,
normally with one firm serving as the lead investor.
Investing together allows venture capitalists
to pool resources and share the risk of an investment.
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Take
downs - see drawdown
Term
sheet - A summary sheet detailing the
terms and conditions of an investment opportunity.
Tombstone
- When a private equity firm has raised
a fund, or it wishes to announce a significant closing,
it may choose to advertise the event in the financial
press – the ad is known as a tombstone. It normally
provides details of how much has been raised,
the date of closing and the lead investors.
Turnaround
- Turnaround finance is provided to a
company that is experiencing severe financial
difficulties. The aim is to provide enough capital
to bring a company back from the brink of collapse.
Turnaround investments can offer spectacular returns
to investors but there are drawbacks: the uncertainty
involved means that they are high risk and they
take time to implement.
Venture
capital - The term given to early-stage
investments. There is often confusion surrounding
this term. Many people use the term venture capital
very loosely and what they actually mean is private
equity.
Vintage
year - The year in which a private equity
fund makes its first investment.

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