With exits few and far between, limited partner capital is tied up, making it challenging for private equity firms to go back to market and raise new billion-dollar funds.
As a result, some buyout funds are reportedly using rolling closes to limit an investor’s ability to pull back their commitments. Carlyle Group asked for an extension to fundraise its $22 billion fund, according to the Financial Times. “This is one of the most challenging fundraising environments we've seen,” Jon Winkelried, CEO of TPG Capital, the $135 billion Fort Worth, Tex.-based private equity firm that went public just over a year ago, said in the company’s fifth-ever earnings call yesterday afternoon. He added he was “very pleased” with TPG’s conversations with LPs and satisfied with his private equity firm’s 2022 performance.
The private equity manager raised $30 billion in capital in 2022—47% more than 2021 levels—from limited partners, which included 60 new institutions and “broadened” commitments from 55 pre-existing LPs, Winkelried said. He also shared yesterday that it “held early first closures across all our flagship funds in the market.” The company is sitting on $43 billion in dry powder and $135 billion of AUM.
Even so, TPG is bracing for what could very well likely be another challenging year to raise capital in private equity: “As we look ahead, we are not immune to the fundraising challenges our industry is facing, which will continue to drive uncertainty as campaigns are completed among alternative asset managers,” he said.
While most venture capital and private equity firms can keep their fundraising woes to themselves, public PE shops have to explain to analysts and investors how they are planning around the private market’s new reality—putting TPG, which went public so recently, in the hot seat.
TPG CFO Jack Weingart said that he expects to extend the fundraising period for the firm’s flagship, capital, health care, Asia, and Rise funds “through the remainder of this year given ongoing challenges in the fundraising market.” He said he expected the first quarter to be “relatively light” as limited partners complete their due diligence, then speed up in the second and third quarters.
“It's too early to tell if we'll hit all of our targets, but we feel very good about the progress we're making across all those funds,” Weingart said.
Meanwhile, TPG’s head of North American and Europe private equity, Todd Sisitsky, said he had gone on “several trips to Europe” to fundraise last year, particularly in the last quarter, and had 25 meetings with prospective investors in that region during 2022. “It feels like there's a lot of untapped potential that we're just starting to make some progress on,” he said. And Weingart highlighted the alternative manager was also looking at insurance companies and high-net-worth investors as a distribution channel for its funds.
Meanwhile, “Buyers and sellers seem to be taking another pause,” as they wait for some macroeconomic indicators to play out—such as interest rates, inflation, and a possible recession, according to Winkelried. Deals have slowed, there are “tighter financing conditions,” and valuations are falling, he said. “Since our IPO early last year, we've navigated markets with more disruption and volatility than we've seen in over a decade,” he said.
Even though TPG slowed down its investing pace last year, the firm is still seeing “pockets of opportunity,” including in health care and climate, and is building out a pipeline of companies it is interested in, according to Winkelried.
All of this is playing out in the numbers. While TPG emphasized its fundraising efforts, increasing management fees, and fund returns, it posted a net loss of $56.2 million for 2022 and a loss of $9.7 million in the fourth quarter. Fourth quarter revenue was $439.3 million—down more than 60% from $1.1 billion in 2021.
What remains to be seen for everyone: Whether 2023 will be much better.
See you tomorrow,
Jessica Mathews
Twitter: @jessicakmathews
Email: jessica.mathews@fortune.com
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