CPP Investment Board Private Equity IRRs
How long has it been? I can’t begin to count the weeks.
And yet you keep asking “where are the blogs”, just the same. So, to satisfy your curiosity and inexplicable continuing interest, I am back. At least temporarily.
In celebration of this week’s annual CVCA conference, I have pulled together a review of the externally-managed private equity portfolio as structured by our managers at CPP Investment Board. It has been a full 15 months since the last review (see prior post “CPP Investment Board’s external Private Equity Managers continue to drag returns” Feb 17-14), which is partly a function of being cowed into submission, while at the same time losing any free time (think bridge) to do the kind of organic early-morning research you’ve come to expect over the past nine years.
As you may recall, CPP Investment Board publishes a quarterly tally of PE fund commitments, the currency of the fund, plus what has been drawn, returned and so forth. Despite my best attempts, they have declined to publish (see prior representative post “CPPIB’s new website fails to improve opaque disclosure” Aug. 8-13) the IRRs for any of these funds, nor the impact of the currency swings on the money that we’ve already deployed, unlike public managers in California, New Mexico, Oregon, Texas and Washington, for example. Nor a pooled IRR calc for our PE investment program, again, unlike the leading U.S. pension funds.
Fortunately, we share enough fund investments (54) with these other pension plans that I’m able to solve for the IRRs on the funds themselves, although the impact of the C$ is still a mystery. With 169 different funds (32%), these findings are likely indicative of the overall PE campaign, particularly since they represent ~C$17B of our C$45.5B of our total external commitments (36.4%).
Following the “simple return” results that are released by the CPPIB are the far more useful “internal rate of return” data provided by one or more of CalPERS, CalSTRS, NMERB, Oregon and WSIB (when a figure is in square brackets, that means it is not as up-to-date as others for that particular fund).
As I always remind, notice the stark difference between the simple return calculations that CPPIB publishes and the true industry-standard investment returns (IRRs) released by these major U.S. public pension plans. Apax Europe VII’s so-called 34% gain sounds soooo much better than a 5.7% IRR to the unwashed pensioner. Particularly since a 5.7% IRR for the overall program would eventually require workers and employers to increase their CPP contributions given the CPP’s solvency threshold is currently 6%:
Advent International GPE VI (2008): CPPIB: +80%, CalSTRS: 17.9% IRR, Oregon: +19.3% IRR
Apax Europe VII (2007): CPPIB: +34%, CalSTRS: +5.7% IRR, Oregon: +5.8% IRR
Apollo V (2002): CPPIB: +109%, CalPERS: 37.6% IRR
Apollo VI (2005): CPPIB: +53%, CalPERS: 9.3% IRR, CalSTRS: 9.9% IRR, Oregon: +9.9% IRR
Apollo VII (2007): CPPIB: +80%, CalPERS: 25.8% IRR, CalSTRS: 26.8% IRR, NMERB: 27.6% IRR
Ares Corporate Opportunities Fund (2003): CPPIB: +59%, CalPERS: 13.1% IRR
Ares Corporate Opportunities Fund II (2006): CPPIB: +66%, CalPERS: 13.6% IRR
Ares Corporate Opportunities Fund III (2008): CPPIB: +59%, CalPERS: 22.3% IRR
Birch Hill Equity Partners III (2005): CPPIB: +90%, CalPERS: 11.9% IRR
Blackstone Capital Partners IV (2002): CPPIB: +149%, CalSTRS: 36.4% IRR
Blackstone Capital Partners V (2005): CPPIB: +60%, CalSTRS: 8.0% IRR
Blackstone Capital Partners VI (2008): CPPIB: +32%; CalSTRS: 19.3% IRR
Bridgepoint Europe II, LP (2001): CPPIB: +70%, CalPERS: 29.6% IRR
Bridgepoint Europe III, LP (2005): CPPIB: +22%, CalPERS: 2.5% IRR, WSIB: +2.5% IRR
Bridgepoint Europe IV, LP (2007): CPPIB: +37%, CalPERS: 10.4% IRR, WSIB: +10.4% IRR
Carlyle Venture Partners II (2002): CPPIB: +11%, CalPERS: 1.5% IRR
Charterhouse Capital Partners IX (2008): CPPIB: +44%, WSIB: +7.7% IRR
Coller International Partners IV (2002): CPPIB: +42%, CalPERS: +11.8% IRR, Oregon: 11.8% IRR
Coller International Partners V (2006): CPPIB: +23%, CalPERS: +9.3% IRR, Oregon: +9.3% IRR
CVC European Equity Partners IV (2005): CPPIB: +91%, CalPERS: +17.4% IRR, CalSTRS: 17.0% IRR, Oregon: +17.2% IRR
CVC European Equity Partners V (2008): CPPIB: +46%; CalPERS: +9.8% IRR, CalSTRS: 9.4% IRR, Oregon: +9.7% IRR
Diamond Castle Partners IV (2005): CPPIB: +2%, Oregon: +1.5% IRR
First Reserve Fund XI (2006): CPPIB: +7%, CalPERS: +1.3% IRR, CalSTRS: +1.3% IRR, Oregon: +0.9% IRR
First Reserve Fund XII (2008): CPPIB: +14%, CalPERS: +4.6% IRR, CalSTRS: +4.6% IRR, Oregon: +4.6% IRR
FountainVest China Growth Fund (2008): CPPIB: +20%, CalSTRS: 7.2% IRR
Hellman & Friedman Capital Partners V (2004): CPPIB: +166%, CalPERS: +28% IRR, CalSTRS: +27.6% IRR
Hellman & Friedman Capital Partners VI (2006): CPPIB: +71%, CalPERS: +12.8% IRR, CalSTRS: 12.9% IRR
Hellman & Friedman Capital Partners VII (2009): CPPIB: +17%; CalPERS: +10.4% IRR, CalSTRS: +10.3% IRR
Hony Capital Fund 2008 (2008): CPPIB: +12%, CalSTRS: +2.9% IRR
KKR 2006 (2006): CPPIB: +52%, CalPERS: +7.1% IRR, CalSTRS: +7.0% IRR, Oregon: +8.5% IRR
KKR Asian Fund (2007): CPPIB: +78%, CalPERS: +14.2% IRR, Oregon: +14.3% IRR, WSIB: +14.2% IRR
KKR European Fund II (2005): CPPIB: +30%, CalPERS: +3.9% IRR, Oregon: +4.5% IRR, WSIB: +4.5% IRR
KKR European Fund III (2008): CPPIB: +44%, CalPERS: +9.7% IRR, Oregon: +10.4% IRR, WSIB: +10.5% IRR
KKR Millennium Fund (2002): CPPIB: +75%, CalPERS: +16.6% IRR, Oregon: +16.6% IRR, WSIB: +17.0% IRR
KSL Capital Partners II (2006): CPPIB: +45%, Oregon: 14.4% IRR, WSIB: +14.4% IRR
Lexington Capital Partners V (2002): CPPIB: +68%, CalPERS: +19.4% IRR
Magnum Capital (2007): CPPIB: +2%, CalPERS: +1.3% IRR
MatlinPatterson Global Opportunities (2001): CPPIB: +76%, Oregon: +15.9% IRR
MatlinPatterson Global Opportunities III (2007): CPPIB: +20%, Oregon: +5.4% IRR
New Mountain Partners III (2007): CPPIB: +29%, CalPERS: +8.2% IRR, Oregon: +8.1% IRR
Onex Partners (2003): CPPIB: +207%, CalSTRS: +38.4% IRR
Onex Partners III (2008): CPPIB: +26%, CalSTRS: +10.8% IRR
Permira IV (2006): CPPIB: +47%, CalPERS: +6.4% IRR, WSIB: +7.4% IRR
Providence Equity Partners VI (2006): CPPIB: +15%, CalPERS: +5.3% IRR, CalSTRS: +5.9% IRR
Silver Lake Partners II (2004): CPPIB: +68%, CalPERS: +10.7% IRR, WSIB: +10.5% IRR
Silver Lake Partners III (2006): CPPIB: +63%, CalPERS: +18.7% IRR, WSIB: +18.5% IRR
Terra Firma Capital Partners III (2006): CPPIB: -36%, Oregon: -19.4% IRR
TPG Asia Fund V (2007): CPPIB: +12%, CalPERS: +3.2% IRR, CalSTRS: +3.2% IRR
TPG Partners IV (2003): CPPIB: +94%, CalPERS: +15.9% IRR, CalSTRS: +15.8% IRR, Oregon: 15.8% IRR
TPG Partners V (2006): CPPIB: +25%, CalPERS: +3.1% IRR, CalSTRS: +4.4% IRR, Oregon: +4.4% IRR
TPG VI (2008): CPPIB: +35%, CalPERS: +11.0% IRR, CalSTRS: +11.1% IRR, Oregon: +11.7% IRR
Triton Fund III (2008): CPPIB: +20%, WSIB: +5.4% IRR
Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe X (2005): CPPIB: +47%, CalPERS: +6.9% IRR, CalSTRS: +6.9% IRR
Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe XI (2008): CPPIB: +44%, CalPERS: +14.2% IRR, CalSTRS: +14.1% IRR
As you’ll see, many funds have pulled themselves out of negative return land. 24 months ago, 8 of the 54 funds that one could analyze had produced a negative IRR; as of Sept. 2014, that figure had fallen to just three. Tomorrow, I’ll break down how these funds are doing based upon capital we’ve committed and vintage year.
(One respectful request of my friends at CPPIB: please don’t shoot the messenger. These figures are objective. The disclosure you provide is by choice. The money being invested belongs to all of us. The performance of the program affects our payroll taxes. You should embrace this sunshine, and be proud to be held to the same performance and transparency standards that you hold the PE and VC industry to.)
MRM
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