Photo
Business Update

Reuters business newsletter, your daily business coverage.

Subscribe

JP Morgan Europe sees a return of buyout IPOs

Tue Nov 14, 2006 10:19am EST

Reporter's Notebook

[-] Text [+]

By Louise Heavens

LONDON (Reuters) - The number of companies floated on the stock market by private equity firms is set to rise after a lull this year, the head of JP Morgan's equity and debt capital markets outside the Americas said on Tuesday.

"The sponsor IPO (initial public offering) phase is going to return. There has been a hiatus," said JP Morgan's Viswas Raghavan at a Reuters investment banking summit in London.

"There was nothing sinister in the lull. We've seen such a volume of issuance that pretty much all of the deals that were going to get done have been done. New money has been invested; a lot those assets will return to the market," he added.

Private equity firms typically use slices of equity and heaps of debt to buy undervalued companies. Sponsors can then install new management, reorganize the business and improve performance over several years before taking companies public again.

Private equity firms try to sell or list assets at a hefty premium, typically for a return of around 25 percent.

Buyout firms have been behind some large IPOs, such as for car-hire firm Hertz (HTZ.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), which was among the biggest stock flotations in the United States so far this year.

But many buyout-backed listings were postponed during May and June's market correction, which was triggered by fears over rising interest rates and lofty valuations.

Raghavan added that the wall of money looking for assets means that most companies are being stalked by multiple bidders, pushing valuations higher.  Continued...

 
Global Environment Oct 06 - 8, 2008 Energy
Autos II Sep 30 - Oct 01, 2008 Hotels/Casinos
Restructuring Sep 22 - 26, 2008 Financial Services/Exchanges
Autos Sep 15 - 17, 2008 Autos
Russia Investment Sep 08 - 9, 2008 Country Summits

What are Summits?

Reuters Summits are your direct link to top business leaders, investors and regulators. Our journalists interview heavyweights in a particular industry, spin out hard-hitting breaking news and sharp analysis that can often move markets. If you want to understand what the insiders are thinking, look for Reuters Summits.  Launch Full Video 

 

Stay connected. Get e-mailed alerts with schedules, speaker lists, and headlines from upcoming and live Industry Summits.