The Case For Emerging Markets Private Equity

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Transcription:

The Case For Emerging Markets Private Equity V.10 May 2012

Introduction IFC has a long-standing commitment to developing the private equity asset class in Emerging Markets (EMs). We now have over ten years of experience with a specialist group focused on investing in Funds and we think other investors may benefit from sharing this experience. Based on our experience and analysis of data from our portfolio we draw the following thoughts : 1) Emerging Market Private Equity (EMPE) has matured significantly as an area of investment. Returns have exceeded those on US PE over the last 10 years and both US and EU returns over the last 5 years. 2) There appear to be diversification benefits in EMPE due to low leverage, its focus on domestic growth and different industry coverage relative to listed markets. 3) The returns on EMPE are driven by growth and efficiency rather than leverage or multiple expansion. 4) Significant growth-oriented PE opportunities are available beyond the small number of countries in which most EMPE investors are currently concentrated. 5) Many of the risks of EMPE are over-stated and we provide data which places these risks in perspective. 2 David Wilton Chief Investment Officer, Manager Global Private Equity Funds June 2012

Presentation We intend that this becomes a living document. We have based the content of this presentation on conversations with investors about the issues they have when they think about investing in EMPE. There will be other issues of interest beyond the ones presently covered, so we have used PowerPoint to make the information available as it is easy to up-date and add new information in response to requests. We encourage you to ask us questions and, if we have the information with which to answer or provide some insight, we will add it to the presentation posted on our website: http://www.ifc.org/funds If you find the information useful and use it in your own presentations, we would appreciate an acknowledgement of IFC and the named data providers. 3

Acknowledgements It is possible to present this information due to the cooperation and hard work of a large number of people. We would particularly like to thank: The Managers of IFC invested funds who have been very generous in responding to our requests for information. The Emerging Markets Private Equity Association (EMPEA) for providing market data and insights. Cambridge Associates for providing benchmark data. Markus Taussig, now a professor at the National University of Singapore, for gathering and analyzing much of the data. 4

Private Equity in Emerging Markets Has Come of Age 5

Private Equity Has Proven Attractive Relative to Public Equity Comparative Net "End-to-End" Returns as of September 30th, 2011 Emerging Markets VC and PE MSCI EM Index S&P %00 Index Index 3 Years 11.9 6.6 1.2 5 Years 12.1 5.2-1.2 10 Years 10.6 16.4 2.8 15 Years 8.3 6.8 5.2 EMPE appears to offer better access to domestic consumer-facing growth sectors (refer slide 9) Source: Cambridge Associates 6

EM PE Returns Have Caught Up and Passed Returns on US/EU PE Comparative Net "End-to-End" Returns as of September 30th, 2011 US Venture Capital Index US Private Equity Index W. Europe PE Index Emerging Markets VC and PE Index 3 Years 5 7.3 3.4 11.9 5 Years 6.8 8.1 8 12.1 10 Years 2.6 11.5 17.5 10.6 15 Years 31.7 11.6 17.4 8.3 Returns on EM PE have exceeded those on US PE over 10 years and both US & EU PE over 5 & 3 years A disproportionate number of EM funds are in the top half and top quartile of the Global PE Universe for vintage years from 2004. For vintage years 2004 to 2008 EM Funds constitute between approximately 30% to 45% of the top quartile of the Global PE Universe. Source: Cambridge Associates 7

Diversification Benefits Exist: Industry Exposure Focus on Domestic Growth Low Leverage Cambridge Associates LLC. Correlation of indices as of December 31, 2011 All Funds Net to LP Top Quartile Net to LP Correlation US and EM Private Equity 2000-2011 0.5705 0.5295 Source: Cambridge Associates, quarterly data March 2000 Sept 2009 8

More Exposure to Consumer Growth than Public Markets 9

Growing Domestic or Regional Companies Provide the Deal Flow As a result of the trends in deregulation and openness, most of the EMPE opportunities are companies targeting growth in Domestic markets or Intraemerging-market growth. Target Market Focus * Target Market Return ** Industrialized Markets, 5% Global, 3% 30 Emerging Markets, 8% 20 10 Regional, 12% Domestic, 72% (percent) 0-10 Median Mean -20-30 Sample: * IFC Funds Portfolio 2009 833 companies with clearly indicated market focus ** 300 companies that were fully exited 10

There are Four Basic Ways to Create IRR A PE fund can achieve the same IRR through any of four basic strategies: leverage, multiple expansion, growth and efficiency. Most funds use a blend of the four. In EMs IRR is driven by growth & efficiency (see Slide 12) IRR Equity Cash out by Dividend, Stock Purchase etc P/E at Entry P/E at Exit Margin Revenue Improves from Growth p.a 5% to x% Holding Period Years Leverage 25% 30% 55% 6 6 0% 5% Multiple Expansion 25% 75% 10% 6 14 0% 5% Growth 25% 75% 10% 6 6 20% 5% Efficiency 25% 75% 85% 6 6 0% 30% 5 5 5 5 Source: IFC model 11

Returns on Private Equity in Emerging Markets are Driven More by Growth than Leverage Higher growth and lower leverage makes the source of risk in EMPE less cyclical and more operational Companies in IFC-invested Funds: Emerging Markets Median Average Annual revenue growth * 19.5% 37.8% Debt-to-equity ratio ** 0.33 0.74 Sample: 2009 * 527 companies in IFC-invested funds with holding time of at least one year ** 604 companies in IFC-invested funds, not including financial services 12

PE in EM Creates Jobs and Supports SMEs An analysis of investments made by 64 PE funds between 2000 and 2010 New Jobs Created 300000 250000 200000 150000 100000 50000 0 Less than 20 employees 20-100 employees 101-300 employees +300 employees 180 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 # of companies 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% Less than 20 employees 20-100 employees 101-300 employees +300 employees Job Creation (net) % Job Growth (net) CAGR 291,000 net new jobs created by 466 portfolio companies. Larger companies create more jobs. 14.7% growth in jobs across the sample. Smaller companies grew faster at 18%. Fastest job growth in companies with 20-100 employees. 13

The Opportunity is Larger Than You Think 14

Both the Breadth and the Quality of the EMPE Opportunity Have Improved Since 2000 Since 2000 the number of countries in which there is a meaningful volume of deal flow suited to PE (equity with real influence or control) has increased considerably. Having adequate deal flow to support local country-based teams improves the quality of the opportunity as deal origination, structuring and providing advice to the companies, can be done in close proximity and in real time by people embedded in the local market. 15

2000 the Start of a Rapidly Growing Opportunity Developed Markets Emerging Markets with Private Equity Opportunity 16

2012 The Opportunity is Very Broad Developed Markets Emerging Markets with Private Equity Opportunity, mostly single country, some regional 17

What Has Driven the Growth of the PE Opportunity? PE requires (i) interesting businesses in which to invest, and (ii) access to equity stakes with influence over the business. Three trends have increased both the number of businesses and the ability to acquire influence. The move to market-based economies since the 1990s is increasing entrepreneurial activity and the number of businesses of interest to PE (see slide 19). The opening of trade and capital flows since 2000 increases both opportunities to expand and competitive pressure, leading to more business owners seeing third party capital as attractive (see slide20). The close identification of family status and wealth with direct ownership of a company reduces as portfolio wealth becomes an option and is seen to work, reducing reluctance to allow in third party equity. Future growth in the PE opportunity in EM will require a continuation of these trends plus improvement at the local level in the ability to enforce contracts and access to debt (see slide 21). 18

Improved Local Conditions Create Businesses Measures of conditions for private business have improved across a wide range of emerging markets since the 1990s, leading to an increase in the number of companies of interest to PE. The scale of the improvement in conditions for private business in EMs since 1990 is significant. Source: Fraser Institute, Economic Freedom of the World (EFW) Index 19

Increased Openness Creates PE Deal Flow Emerging markets have opened their trade and capital accounts since 2000, increasing both opportunities to expand and competition in domestic markets. This creates more situations where sale of equity with influence over the business is seen as desirable by owners in order to attract the capital or the skills needed to expand, to compete, or to increase focus on core business by sale of non-core business. Increase 1999-2008 Brazil 45% China 73% India 104% 20

Key Drivers of Growth in the PE Opportunity 21

Low Penetration Room to Grow Further Even in the BRICs, fundraising as a percentage of GDP is low in EMs compared to the US, indicating much more room to grow. Source: EMPEA 22

Continued Growth in Emerging Markets Supports Private Equity GDP Growth in EMs predicted to remain considerably above that of developed economies GDP growth predicted to remain positive across the emerging markets Source: International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook Database, April 2012 GDP at constant prices, percentage change 23

Share of World GDP is Dynamic Differential rates of growth, over time, have a significant effect on the distribution of investment opportunities Source: Angus Maddison, University of Groningen 24

Taking Advantage of the Broader Opportunity Improves Returns 25

Private Equity Performance Benefits from Diversification IRR from Jan '00 to. June 30 2011 IFC: Private Equity Funds * 22.20% IFC: All Funds ** 18.30% Cambridge EM PE Top Quartile *** 19.80% Cambridge Asia EM PE Top Quartile *** 21.70% Cambridge US PE Top Quartile *** 17.40% IFC has out-performed the Emerging Market Index with a much more geographically diversified exposure. * Includes: Agribusiness, Cleantech, Midcap, Mining, SME, VC and Healthcare Funds ** Includes: Agribusiness, Cleantech, Midcap, Mining, Small business, SME, VC, Healthcare, Debt, Forestry, Infrastructure, Listed, Real Estate, Secondary Funds *** All PE Fund types excluding Forestry, Infrastructure, Real Estate, and Secondary Funds 26

Myth Busters: Frequently Cited Risks with Private Equity in Emerging Markets 27

Minority Positions Are NOT Too Risky Minority positions (blue) have performed well in all forms of exit, indicating that the risks associated with minority positions can be managed effectively. Median IRR Average IRR 50% 50% 40% 40% 30% 20% Majority Minority 30% 20% 10% 10% 0% IPO/Listing Trade Sale MBO Structured Exit 0% IPO/Listing Trade Sale MBO Structured Exit Sample: 2009 Exits of 61 majority positions and 251 minority positions from IFC invested funds 28

Smaller Companies Are NOT Too Risky Experience in deals as small as $2 million has been positive, suggesting that smaller companies are less risky than commonly perceived. 70.00% 60.00% 50.00% 40.00% 30.00% 20.00% 10.00% 0.00% -10.00% -20.00% IRR by Investment Size * + Median Mean 35.00% 30.00% 25.00% 20.00% 15.00% 10.00% 5.00% 0.00% Investment Size $ million Share of Write Offs by Investment Size ** Low Sample: 2009 * 313 exits from IFC invested funds ** 323 exits from IFC invested funds 29

Attractive Exits ARE Available Attractive exits are happening despite less developed capital markets, although access to an IPO improves returns. Average Holding Period = 4.9 years Number of Exits * IRR on Exits ** 140 60 120 100 80 60 40 20 (percent) 50 40 30 20 10 Median Mean 0 IPO Trade sale MBO Structured Exit Write Off 0 IPO Trade sale MBO Structured Exit Sample: 2009 * 325 exits from IFC invested Funds ** 266 non-write-off exits 30

A Fund Manager With the Right Skills CAN Overcome 1 st Time Fund & Frontier Risks IFC s experience is that the differentiating factor in fund quality is the Manager s skill set, not 1 st time fund risk or a frontier focus. IRR as of March 2009 (simple average %) Development Impact Score Highly Suc = 3 HighlyUn S = -1 1st Time Funds % IDA % (<$1000 GDP per capita) Average Deal Quality Score Max = 1 Min = 0 Top 10% 46.6% 2.10 53% 27% 0.97 Bottom 10% -38.3% 0.14 53% 13% 0.17 Sample: 2009 150 Funds currently in IFC portfolio, excluding those in the J-curve The Same More Top 10% in the Frontier 31

First Time Fund Risk is Lower Than Expected IRR from 2000 to June 30th 2011 IFC All Funds 18.3% 1st Time Funds 24.0% Non-1st Time Funds 11.1% Early Mover Advantage reduces risk on 1 st Time funds in Emerging Markets 32

It Does NOT Take Longer to Exit the J-Curve Net IRR Source: IFC fund investments by Vintage Year as at June 2011 33