US Private Equity Activity Slows in Q2 2020 As Global Economies Struggle Through COVID-19 Pandemic

SEATTLE, July 10, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- PitchBook, the premier data provider for the private and public equity markets, today released its 2Q 2020 US Private Equity Breakdown, which found the velocity of US PE investment activity further diminished in Q2 2020 as dealmakers felt the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. In fact, many GPs sought to pull out of previously agreed upon deals, sometimes invoking the material adverse change (MAC) clause. Of the deals that were completed, a high proportion were add-ons and subsequently smaller than platform deals on average causing add-ons to have comprised the highest percentage of LBOs on record. On the exits front, activity collapsed to an even greater extent than deal activity as PE firms sharply marked down portfolio companies and chose to hold investments rather than sell. After a rebound in public markets, exit value was assisted by a couple outsized IPOs while sales to strategics or other financial sponsors lagged. PE fundraising momentum will likely remain healthy, despite a slowdown from 2019's record-setting pace, with several mega-funds closing in the quarter. The department of labor also issued clarification on rules around including PE funds in diversified funds - such as target date funds - within 401(k)s. But any changes to target date funds are likely to take years and the PE will only account for a minor share, meaning access to retail accounts may not be the spark that some GPs had been hoping for.

To download the report and underlying data, click here.

"Following the first full quarter where global economies experienced the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, many PE firms are in triage mode and trying to determine which portfolio companies to save, rather than looking to sell," said Wylie Fernyhough, senior PE analyst at PitchBook. "There are still a lot of uncertainties as to what the coming quarters will hold, but PE fundraising remained healthy through the first half of the year. A couple mega-funds launched in Q2, exhibiting confidence that LPs will find success despite the challenges brought on by the coronavirus, but the same cannot be said for nascent managers."

Investment Activity

    --  Through the first half of 2020, US PE dealmaking decelerated with 2,173
        deals closed totaling $326.7 billion, a nearly 20% decrease in deal
        value compared to this time last year. Quarterly figures show an even
        steeper fall, with Q2 2020 deal value down more than a third from Q1
        2019 values.
    --  PE firms had to get creative with dealmaking, turning to PIPEs and
        divestitures because traditional sources of deal flow have dried up. For
        instance, sponsor-to-sponsor transactions (or secondary buyouts, SBOs)
        have slumped to their lowest levels since 2009 and median buyout size
        dipped for the first time since 2015.
    --  Despite deal sizes falling, several massive M&A transactions still
        closed in the quarter. HR management software firms Kronos and Ultimate
        Software Group merged to create an entity valued at $22.0 billion and
        JAB Holding's portfolio company, Compassion-First Pet Hospital acquired
        National Veterinary Associates for $5.0 billion from Ares and OMERS.

Exit Activity

    --  US PE firms closed 392 exits totaling $134.8 billion through the first
        half of the year with a couple of massive IPOs driving much of the
        second quarter's exit value. Announced global PE exits were down
        approximately 70% in May 2020 compared to May 2019 following a steep
        falloff in portfolio company valuations and GPs struggling to value
        companies in such a chaotic time, preventing potential sales.
    --  One notable exit from the second quarter was ZoomInfo (NAS: ZI). The
        company raised nearly $1 billion in the offering and nearly doubled in
        price on the opening day, putting its market cap around $15 billion. TA
        Associates paid $90 million for its stake in 2014, which is now worth
        north of $6.2 billion, the largest paper gain in the firm's history.
        Carlyle also achieved an outsized return, collecting 13 times its
        investment in a little over a year.
    --  Several portfolio companies fell victim to heavy debt loads and the
        crisis, forcing bankruptcy. Many of the names, including J.Crew, Nieman
        Marcus, 24 Hour Fitness, and John Varvatos are in the retail arena as
        physical retail struggled to remain afloat during the pandemic.

Fundraising Activity

    --  By quarter's end, US PE fundraising activity posted healthy figures,
        bringing 1H 2020 totals to 101 funds closed accumulating $101.6 billion
        and putting 2020 on pace to approximate 2018's total capital raised
        figure. Despite the coronavirus halting business travel and forcing
        digital due diligencing rather than in person, PE firms raised more
        capital in 2Q than in 1Q when these restrictions were largely not
        present.
    --  The second quarter saw several tech-focused investors either launch
        fundraises or close funds, though perhaps none were more impressive than
        Francisco Partners. At an almost unheard-of pace, the firm officially
        launched fundraising and concurrently held final closes on three funds
        totaling $9.75 billion within six weeks in Q2.
    --  Special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs or blank check companies)
        had their most active quarter on record. PE firms, VCs, and hedge funds
        have been turning to SPACs with success recently to close deals. SPACs
        can help inexpensively take sponsor-backed companies public but
        increasingly may be competing with other PE firms for deals, such as a
        new blank check company looking to buy a "mature unicorn."

Additional coverage in this report includes:

    --  Introduction
    --  Overview
    --  Deals by size and sector
    --  Spotlight: Growth equity
    --  Exits
    --  Fundraising

Download the full report here.

About PitchBook
PitchBook is a financial data and software company that provides transparency into the capital markets to help professionals discover and execute opportunities with confidence and efficiency. PitchBook collects and analyzes detailed data on the entire venture capital, private equity and M&A landscape--including public and private companies, investors, funds, investments, exits and people. The company's data and analysis are available through the PitchBook Platform, industry news and in-depth reports. Founded in 2007, PitchBook has offices in Seattle, San Francisco, New York and London and serves more than 45,000 professionals around the world. In 2016, Morningstar acquired PitchBook, which now operates as an independent subsidiary.

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