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Why private equity firms avoid technology companies

If you've ever wondered why so many low-P/E ratio technology companies haven't been gobbled up, there is a really good explanation: R&D, leverage, and volatility.

Business Week just ran a great cover story titled "When a Buyout Goes Bad" for this week's magazine. The case in hand is the old private equity buyout of Freescale, which was the chip business from Motorola Inc. (NYSE: MOT). This talks about a company that was turned around from the edge of the cliff by a great tech leader who created a great stock again. Then the $17.6 billion buyout came from a group led by The Blackstone Group (NYSE: BX), Carlyle Group, and Permira Advisers. This buyout came after being in a competing bid from a consortium led by KKR, Bain Capital, Apax Partners, and Silver Lake Partners.

Last year the company's revenues fell 10% while the chip sector revenues grew by 5%, then Motorola announced a spin-off or sale of its handset business, and then there is the issue of the $9.5 billion in debt that was clumped on top of the company to get the private equity buyout done.

Unless you are selling transistors and capacitors or just plain Jane DRAM, technology companies require heavy R&D commitments. This is why historically technology companies used to come public back before the 1990's "get rich from tech stock option awards" became the norm. The accounting changes required investor backers of a different group to mark down 15% of their $7 Billion stake as well. In fact, it notes that it is having a hard time ponying up the $1.2 billion for R&D and $400 million for capital expenditures needed for Freescale. And now there are inventory problems.

For me personally, I am not all that surprised that Freescale was a temporary success. One night right shortly before Freescale was spun-off by Motorola, I was flying from Austin to Chicago. I spoke to two workers that said they were low level managers for Freescale. When they called the company "Free-Fall" and told me about some of their pension or retirement issues and stock option plans getting mixed up (not for the better, at all), it left a bad taste in my mouth. Then when this one went private with that much debt and knowing what comm-chip R&D percentages of revenue were, I thought the billionaires were drinking too much of the cool-aid.

You should read that article as it puts it well into context. This is why niche technology companies generally end up being acquired by other niche technology companies or by larger tech companies that are competitors or that can complement each other. In mid to late-2006 you started seeing the private equity frenzy go into overdrive.

If you want good news or the silver lining, I do actually have some. I think that there will be another wave of public technology companies that get acquired. But the buyers will almost all be LARGER public technology companies. Private equity and technology can mix, but the deals need to be smaller deals with less leverage and in companies that require less R&D.

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