National Post

Now that everyone hates private equity, I’ll buy some

- STUART KIRK Stuart Kirk is a former portfolio manager.

The bugger with being a contrarian by nature is when the average Joe is right. On how many occasions have I taken the road less travelled only to discover hundreds of potholes and a collapsed bridge ahead?

Such as when I went short on U.S. equities five months into a post-financial crisis rebound that continues to this day. Or my shunning of residentia­l real estate. London property is too expensive compared with incomes, I warned a quarter-century ago.

Sometimes, crowds really are wise — loath as I am to admit it. The statistici­an Francis Galton proved as much in 1917 after analyzing hundreds of entries in an ox-weighing competitio­n. He found the median guess accurate to within one per cent.

For some reason, though, I prefer to go down in a blaze of glory alone. Massive groups of people all cheering at the same thing scare me. In contrast, universal doom-mongering — such as over climate-related financial risk — turns me rabidly optimistic.

Staying cheerful is useful when it comes to investing, however. Especially in shares. Observe a longrun chart of the world’s major stock markets and they mostly go up. That’s why buying when those about you are losing their heads is such a winner.

As I reminded a new equity strategist who joined a bank I once worked for. He wanted to make a name for himself by calling the top of the market, against the prevailing view at the time. Only bulls survive your game, I told him. A year later, he was gone.

This, of course, makes me a hypocrite for selling the S&P 500 last September, despite going long at the start of 2023 when everyone else was negative. Still, buying outof-favour markets has worked well for me this year.

Most commentato­rs have forgotten how negative they used to be about United Kingdom equities. Likewise, Chinese stocks only began rallying in February after it was universall­y agreed they were “uninvestab­le.” Energy companies were predicted to suffer from the green transition as well as divestment.

All this goes to explain why I am warming to private equity after decades of criticizin­g the industry. Not that it cared. The sound of money being made drowned out my harrumphin­g.

But now everyone reckons you’ll soon be able to buy secondhand Tod’s loafers, three pairs for a tenner, on ebay. Investment returns are down. Cash cannot be deployed. Liquidity has evaporated. Higher rates make gearing more expensive.

All true — not even PE’S opaque numbers can hide these facts. But let me explain why I’m going to buy some regardless. In my view, the potential upside outweighs my long-held aversion to the half-zip sweater brigade.

First, I reckon borrowing costs will decline from here, and that’s good for an industry that generates much of its returns from leverage. But if they don’t, I’m not too worried either. Higher rates mean a stronger economy. And I believe the more onerous the debt repayments, the more focused PE managers will be on operationa­l returns.

Likewise, I’m comfortabl­e regardless of asset values rising or falling. The former would boost liquidity and performanc­e. If the latter, an estimated US$2.6 trillion of so-called dry powder can be put to work at more sensible valuations.

Indeed, this optionalit­y is a genuine plus versus listed equity portfolios, which tend to be fully invested. PE funds with the best returns are the vintages launched during a downward correction in prices. It’s an inbuilt contrarine­ss that appeals.

Sure, PE funds will overpay for assets if prices remain high and investors apply pressure on them to spend their cash. But it is no different for listed equity managers — look at the silly valuations of big technology names these days.

In addition, the expected returns of the major listed equity markets are mid-to-low single digits, as I wrote earlier this month when I reviewed readers’ suggestion­s on how to double my money in eight years. And, given that academic literature is still divided on whether a privately run company should necessaril­y outperform a public one on average, leverage is key.

Which is why other research, such as by AQR Capital Management LLC, concludes that investors would be just as well off buying a small-cap fund (because in reality, few PE firms buy large companies) on margin. You get the leverage and you avoid the industry’s high fees.

But in practice, this is hard to do, especially in a pension fund such as mine. Leveraged exchange-traded funds (ETFS), meanwhile, are notoriousl­y hard to understand and are themselves expensive. So I couldn’t help screaming “duh!” when a reader suggested I buy an ETF of listed PE firms instead.

I feel like a moron for not thinking about it before. These ETFS trade like equities and only hold equities, so there are no liquidity issues here. You share in the geared upside of assets managed by the likes of Blackstone Inc., KKR & Co. Inc. and Apollo Global Management Inc. Better still, you’re the one receiving the fees!

What’s not to love, concluded Tim Robson’s email to me — himself an ex-pro in the PE world. My platform has a sterling one, the ishares Listed Private Equity ETF, which is up 60 per cent over the past five years. The S&P 500 has done much better in pounds, yes, but is worryingly concentrat­ed now.

The ETF also has a price-toearnings ratio of 12 times. That’s half what large U.S. shares currently trade at, though PE valuations are largely self-constructe­d. You only really know the value of the underlying assets upon their sale.

Sure, you pay fees of 0.75 per cent, but that is less than Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust PLC, which I also pointed out as an example of another way of gaining PE exposure. In conclusion, then, I think I’ll buy some IPRV before I take a contrarian view of myself.

Lunch is on me, Tim.

 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? I reckon borrowing costs will decline from here, and that’s good for an industry that generates much of its returns from leverage. But if they don’t, I’m not too worried either. Higher rates mean a stronger economy, Stuart Kirk writes.
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES I reckon borrowing costs will decline from here, and that’s good for an industry that generates much of its returns from leverage. But if they don’t, I’m not too worried either. Higher rates mean a stronger economy, Stuart Kirk writes.
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