Public company LBO

I have a take home company for a PE shop which is a take private for a public company. Have been given very vague instructions, but essentially need to build a LBO / investment recommendation with my own projections and financing structure

Two questions;

1) I’m pretty comfortable with private company LBOs but haven’t done much public company LBO, could anyone guide me to some relevant resources?

2) Also given it’s a 5 day case study do you think they will require more detail in the modelling? Instead of modelling individual cost items it seems wiser to assume an EBITDA margin?

Thanks a lot

 
Most Helpful

Answers below:  

1. I don't have any good resources off hand. I think the reason they are doing this way is it does not drastically change your model, but it does limit what they have to give you to complete the model, as in Comps should be sourced from public markets, you have historical through the SEC, general forecast guidance is provided in earnings calls, etc.   

You may have some private comps, but I would not expect someone to go through this exercise unless provided with the data for the comps

2. 5 days, does this include a weekend? I personally hate time like this because you don't know if they are thinking - Oh they have a job and we need to give them ample time during this period or, lets see how many hours they will sink into this case. Generally, I think rule of thumb is 3-4 hours on market research, 1.5 hour on putting historical together, 2-3 hours on putting together a clean LBO, 1 hour model review, 2 hours on producing clean outputs this is about 10-12 hours in a 5 day period. Hope that helps. 

 
[Comment removed by mod team]
 

1) Ultimately a big difference is about sources and uses. Think about what uses there are in a P2P?: Do you assume management rolls with the deal? If they roll what does that mean for your equity ticket? What happens to the PF ownership structure if there are share warrants? Are there any activists in the shareholder base?

2) It really depends on the industry. E.g. if you are modelling a business in an industry where there is cost pass through, EBITDA /gross margin is completely meaningless as metric - contribution margin is key here. 

Do you have an investment thesis? e.g. if you believe the SOTP valuation of a business is higher than the current valuation (at which you do the P2P), then maybe you spin out the asset heavy part of the business? This has implications for your capex intensity for example (hence impacting UFCF, the rate at which you deleverage etc)

I'd focus more on the actual company - the model is more of a way to flex your thesis and to help you understand your need to believe to reach a target return

 

If it’s a simple business model, may make you look better to be more detailed with cost items- perhaps you weave that into the investment thesis (ex: manufacturing cost will decrease XYZ, thus the margins increase). 

 

5 day case means a detailed model - project each type of revenue, show some understanding on costs so I would project that individually as well. Typically thesis has one key point that interviewers are really trying to get out of you - if you do not understand the biz you will never figure that point out.
Since it is public co, I would do a premium analysis.

 

Since it’s a public company make sure you do a more detailed build to get to equity value, look in the 10-k for options, warrants, and RSU’s to get the FDSO. Also you can do a more detailed analysis of their debt # and cash #.

 

Aliquid exercitationem rem quidem qui et blanditiis. Placeat perferendis modi voluptatem doloribus perferendis error. Consequatur quo totam perspiciatis totam. Iure temporibus saepe amet illum explicabo quae et qui. Explicabo illum saepe sunt et rerum autem sunt. Expedita aut non impedit officiis ipsum officia.

Officiis maiores dolores consectetur necessitatibus vel vero ad. Corrupti earum voluptatibus ipsam.

Officiis rerum consectetur dolorum excepturi voluptatum quia et aliquam. Labore est eos eius ab. Ea ipsam beatae laboriosam a dolores qui aut.

Sit eligendi doloremque aut molestiae rerum molestiae aut. Ipsam recusandae consequatur velit amet similique quod. Beatae dolorum nobis voluptas laborum officia eveniet. Maxime officiis et ratione.

Career Advancement Opportunities

June 2024 Private Equity

  • The Riverside Company 99.5%
  • Blackstone Group 99.0%
  • Warburg Pincus 98.4%
  • KKR (Kohlberg Kravis Roberts) 97.9%
  • Bain Capital 97.4%

Overall Employee Satisfaction

June 2024 Private Equity

  • The Riverside Company 99.5%
  • Blackstone Group 98.9%
  • KKR (Kohlberg Kravis Roberts) 98.4%
  • Ardian 97.9%
  • Bain Capital 97.4%

Professional Growth Opportunities

June 2024 Private Equity

  • The Riverside Company 99.5%
  • Bain Capital 99.0%
  • Blackstone Group 98.4%
  • Warburg Pincus 97.9%
  • Starwood Capital Group 97.4%

Total Avg Compensation

June 2024 Private Equity

  • Principal (9) $653
  • Director/MD (22) $569
  • Vice President (92) $362
  • 3rd+ Year Associate (91) $281
  • 2nd Year Associate (206) $268
  • 1st Year Associate (389) $229
  • 3rd+ Year Analyst (29) $154
  • 2nd Year Analyst (83) $134
  • 1st Year Analyst (246) $122
  • Intern/Summer Associate (32) $82
  • Intern/Summer Analyst (316) $59
notes
16 IB Interviews Notes

“... there’s no excuse to not take advantage of the resources out there available to you. Best value for your $ are the...”

Leaderboard

success
From 10 rejections to 1 dream investment banking internship

“... I believe it was the single biggest reason why I ended up with an offer...”