UPDATE 5-Blackstone profit tops view; sees more deals ahead
* Q3 EPS 25 cents; Street view 15 cents
* Has $27 bln of capital available for investment
* Says deal flow up, fund-raising improving
* Shares rise 7 pct (Adds background about recent sales; fundraising, shares)
By Megan Davies
NEW YORK, Nov 6 (Reuters) - Private equity firm Blackstone Group LP (BX.N) posted a forecast-beating quarterly profit on Friday and said it is gearing up for more deals and IPOs as the lending and equity markets recover.
The company, which has immense real estate and private equity assets, has stepped up deal activity in the past few months, including buying Anheuser-Busch InBev's (ABI.BR) U.S. theme parks for up to $2.7 billion.
"Our pipeline of new deals is growing substantially," Blackstone Chief Operating Officer Tony James said on a conference call.
He said Blackstone has $27 billion of "dry powder" -- capital available for investment. The lion's share is in its real estate and private equity funds.
It is considering initial public offerings for a number of its companies, and expects the IPO window to stay open at least until the beginning of next year. Opportunities to sell to strategic buyers have also been increasing.
One recent sale Blackstone struck was a deal in September to sell soft drinks firm Orangina to Japanese brewer Suntory. Proceeds from that deal totaled about $705 million, according to a recent letter it sent to investors in its funds.
The pick-up is the latest sign of improvement in the private equity industry, which has struggled to keep portfolio companies healthy during the recession and has had limited access to financing for new deals.
On Thursday the biggest leveraged buyout this year was struck: Blackstone rival TPG [TPG.UL] and the Canada Pension Plan agreed to buy IMS Health Inc (RX.N) for $4 billion.
FUNDRAISING THAW?
Blackstone said that raising money for new funds is improving, and investors are talking seriously about putting money to work.
Raising private equity funds has been extremely hard as pension and endowment investors, which took a large hit on their equity portfolios during the turmoil, have been unwilling to commit fresh capital. Continued...

