CVC Capital Partners is considering buying a minority stake in Italy’s top soccer league in a move that would give the buyout firm access to one of the world’s top sporting showcases, home to star players like Cristiano Ronaldo and Zlatan Ibrahimovic.
CVC is in talks to purchase as much as 20% of Serie A for about 2 billion euros ($2.2 billion), according to people with knowledge of the matter. That would value the league at about 10 billion euros, they said, asking not to be named as discussions aren’t public.
In the deal, the fund would buy a minority stake in a league unit that also own its lucrative TV rights, the people said. Talks, which have been underway for several weeks, could still fall apart and the size of the investment hasn’t been finalized, they said.
Serie A is seeking funding at a time league play has been been suspended for about two months amid a nationwide lockdown to fight the coronavirus pandemic.
Representatives for Serie A and CVC declined to comment.
CVC has prior experience with investments in sports-related businesses. The private equity firm, which manages about $82 billion of assets, has invested in Formula One auto racing and has weighed buying a stake in the Six Nations global rugby organization.
Italian teams such as Juventus Football Club SpA have reached agreements with players to reduce compensation as the virus outbreak forced the league to halt play. AC Milan, owned by U.S. investment fund Elliott Management Corp., is also considering cutting player salaries.
Italy eased its nationwide lockdown Monday, allowing more than four million employees to return to work and permitting people to leave their homes for certain activities, including jogging and trips to parks. No date has been set yet for a return to play for Serie A.
Source: Bloomberg
A bailout strikeout for buyouts
Private equity firms have gone hat in hand to lawmakers to argue that their portfolio companies should get coronavirus assistance alongside Main Street companies. They’ve come up short in at least one big way, The Times’s Kate Kelly and Peter Eavis found.
A big sticking point is the “affiliation rule” for some lending programs, which essentially treats companies owned by a private equity firm as part of a conglomerate, rather than separately. This excludes them from aid based on company size. The main private equity lobbying group has tried to get an exemption.
Individual firms have also lobbied for help for their holdings. Carlyle, for instance, wants aid for troubled aviation companies — including three it owns that have applied for relief. One of them, PrimeFlight, said it had “not received any funding” yet.
Private equity has had some success. A big breakthrough was when the Fed expanded a $100 billion lending program known as TALF to accept most kinds of corporate debt, including many junk bonds, as collateral. The move came after Apollo presented an elaborate proposal to Jared Kushner, President Trump’s son-in-law and a White House adviser, and lawmakers.
Critics in Washington aren’t inclined to give them a break. Private equity firms “do fabulously well when their risky bets pay off, and they are the people arguably best positioned to absorb losses right now,” Bharat Ramamurti, a member of the congressional committee overseeing federal bailout efforts, told Kate and Peter.
Wishful thinking on earnings
It has been a somber earnings season, to say the least. A majority of big companies have now reported quarterly results and fielded questions from investors about what their future holds.
Profits are down, and worse is to come. S&P 500 earnings are on track to fall by around 14 percent compared with the first quarter of last year, according to FactSet. That would be the worst such decline since 2009, and pandemic shutdowns only began toward the end of the quarter. Analysts expect steeper declines in the second quarter (37 percent) and the third (20 percent).
Executives don’t know what’ll happen. It’s a time-honored tradition on Wall Street for companies to offer guidance on their future earnings. (Usually, these forecasts are just below the earnings the companies end up reporting.) Now, C.E.O.s are throwing their hands up: More than 100 companies in the S&P 500 stock index have scrapped regularly provided forecasts. Analysts are “flying blind,” one lamented to the FT.
So why are stocks up? The S&P 500 has risen nearly 30 percent from its March low all the same. Andrea Cicione of TS Lombard describes this as a “narrow recovery,” driven by the stocks of tech giants like Amazon that benefit from lockdowns. With so many companies withdrawing guidance, he says that bank earnings are the best forward-looking indicator — and that a huge spike in lenders’ provisions against bad loans “was an eye-opener.”
• John Authers of Bloomberg reckons that hopeful investors are “drawing the best possible conclusions” from earnings calls and discounting bad news.
Remember buybacks? Like a dispatch from a bygone era, companies’ first-quarter reports reveal how aggressively executives were buying back shares before the pandemic hit, with repurchases running 13 percent higher than the previous quarter, according to S&P.
• AlphaSense combed through the filings and calculated that 135 big companies (with a market cap of at least $5 billion) spent more than $40 billion on buybacks in March alone.
• Buybacks, dividends, overhead, capex and just about every other cash expense are now being cut, so second-quarter earnings reports will feel much more austere.
Source: The New York Times
Can’t stop reading? Read more
Top private equity news of the week
A consortium of investors, led by Maverick Carter and advised by UBS Group AG and Evercore, is...
IMM Private Equity fully exits Woori Financial with 2.4x ROI
IMM Private Equity sold its remaining 1.38% stake in Woori Financial Group for 166.4 billion won...
LACERA commits $2.2bn to private markets, diversifying $77bn portfolio
The Los Angeles County Employees’ Retirement Association approved $2.2bn in commitments across...