Amundi warns that corners of private equity market resemble ‘Ponzi schemes’

Europe’s largest asset manager has likened parts of the private equity industry to a “Ponzi scheme” that will face a reckoning in the coming years.

“Some parts of private equity look like a pyramid scheme in a way,” Amundi Asset Management’s chief investment officer Vincent Mortier said in a presentation on Wednesday. “You know you can sell [assets] to another private equity firm for 20 or 30 times earnings. That’s why you can talk about a Ponzi. It’s a circular thing.”

Public stock and bond markets leave little room for typical investment managers like Amundi, which has €2tn in assets, to hide their performance, as fluctuations in asset prices are easy to track daily or even in real time — a process known as marking to market.

Private equity houses, by contrast, typically lock up investors’ money for a period of several years, and information about whether their target companies have gained or shrunk in value becomes public only if they list the business or choose to disclose the price they sold it for to another buyer.

In the mean time, quarterly assessments are often sophisticated guesswork based on roughly equivalent assets in public markets, and shared privately with investors.

Often, private equity groups sell assets to other private equity groups. In 2021, they even struck $42bn worth of deals in which they sold portfolio companies to themselves.

Mortier said the incentives are for private equity…

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