Blackstone listed on the New York Stock Exchange during the summer of 2007. Doing so just before the global financial come early 2009 the firm's shares had lost almost 90% of their value. By the time the two other members of America's private markets troika rang the bell, Wall Street had been battered. KKR listed on July 15th 2010, the same day Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Act, overhauling bank regulation. Apollo followed eight months later.
Each firm told investors a similar story: private equity, the business of buying companies with debt, was their speciality.
But as the economy recovered, private-markets firms flourished-emerging as the new kings of Wall Street. The biggest put more and more money into credit, infrastructure and property. By 2022 total assets under management had reached $12trn. Those at Apollo, Blackstone and KKR have risen from $420bn to $2.2trn over the past decade. Thanks to the firms' diversification, their shares rose by 67% on average during 2023, even as higher interest rates caused buy-outs to grind to a halt. Although private equity has plenty of critics, the model of raising and investing funds-whether to buy firms or lend to them seldom worries regulators. If things go wrong, losses are shouldered by a fund's institutional investors and humiliated fund managers struggle to raise money again. There is little threat to financial stability.
Esta historia es de la edición January 25, 2024 de Mint Mumbai.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición January 25, 2024 de Mint Mumbai.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
GDP growth falters in Q2, hopes pinned on 2nd half
GDP growth of 5.4% was the lowest in nearly two years, lower than estimates
Aster DM merges with Quality Care in $5-billion deal
Bengaluru-based Aster DM Healthcare on Friday announced a merger with Blackstone-backed Quality Care India Ltd (QCIL) in a deal that will value the combined entity at $5.08 billion (₹43,000 crore).
AIFs, equities pip realty in family office funding
What's Ahead for Family Offices?
Defence contracts emerge as key biz for telecom infra makers
India's push for local manufacturing has prised open a new business frontier for domestic telecom equipment manufacturers.
HUL turns to high-growth segments to lift demand
Premium is the watchword for packaged consumer goods major Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL), as it unveiled a new strategy on Friday to ride on an expected rise in household income and increasing consumer preference for more expensive brands and products.
Russia's war economy shows new cracks after ruble plunges
The Russian economy, surprisingly resilient through two-plus years of war and sanctions, has suddenly begun to show serious strains.
Colgate making right moves, but valuation a concern
Colgate Palmolive (India) Ltd has had a good run in recent quarters and continues to make efforts to boost growth.
Kalyani family's wealth war takes a fresh turn
Gaurishankar Kalyani has filed papers to back his claim that HUF exists
Zomato raises ₹8,500 crore via QIP
A big part of the proceeds is to be used to expand Zomato's quick commerce arm Blinkit
Fintech startup Klub halves workforce
Bengaluru-based financing startup Klub laid off about 60-70 employees in September and paused its commerce operations, according to multiple people aware of the developments.