SOURCE: San Francisco Chronicle
Equity firms' impact on employment assessed
Tom Abate, Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, May 14, 2010
The 1,205 California companies backed by private equity firms employ an
estimated 1.2 million Californians, according to a report from a trade
group representing the largest of these buyout entities.
The Private Equity Council also estimates that 10.9 million Americans
work for 9,473 companies run by the more than 1,500 such investment
firms nationwide.
Private equity firms combine capital from general partners with
investments from limited partners, such as pension funds, and use this
capital to buy, reorganize and resell companies. Seagate Technology,
the disk drive manufacturer with operations in Scotts Valley, is a
local example of a company that went through a period of private equity
control and re-emerged a publicly traded concern.
The council, whose dozen members include the Bay Area's Hellman &
Friedman and Silver Lake, based its findings on the activities of the
broader private equity investment establishments of which its members
are among the largest entities.
The council report comes at a time when critics, including AFL-CIO
President Richard Trumka, have asked Congress to rein in the activities
of private equity investors.
"They are unregulated and shrouded in secrecy, and they extract big
profits, while the companies, their employees and many of their
investors lose," Trumka wrote in a recent opinion piece.
Oregon-based
investment adviser Bill Parish, a critic of private equity firms,
likened their investment style to the leveraged buyouts of the 1980s.
"Private equity is a euphemism for leveraged buyout," he said.
The council report cited numerous studies that rebut critics and
bolster its contention that private equity investors improve the
companies they acquire and resell. These include:
-- A 2008 study of 5,000 transactions over 25 years commissioned by the
World Economic Forum and led by Harvard Business School Professor Josh
Lerner that said private equity investment over time often slows or
halts existing job losses and can drive job growth in new facilities.
-- Two separate World Economic Forum reports in 2009 that said
private-equity owned companies are better managed and reward employees
for improved performance with higher wages, benefits and job security.
"Private equity investment over time strengthens companies, makes them
more competitive and drives benefits to workers and investors," council
spokesman Robert Stewart said in a statement.
E-mail Tom Abate at tabate@sfchronicle.com.
Bill Parish
Parish & Company
10260 SW Greenburg Rd., Suite 400
Portland, OR 97223
Tel: 503-643-6999
email: bill@billparish.com