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fiprofessor | 2 years ago

> The gameplan is simple: lend your buddy the money to buy the business. Now you have a line to the person who has the most access to data about, if not control over, the direction of the business. Wherever it happens to go, you can be ahead of the market. Long if it's going to survive and grow; short if it's doomed. He's happy because the decision to be lenient or aggressive about repayment lies with his own contact - you.

But if the business is privately held (because the borrower used the loan to buy the business), then what market is the lender going long/short against in this hypothetical conspiracy? Other (public) businesses in the market? Potential investors when the PE firm sells and takes the business public?

discuss

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underlipton|2 years ago

>Other (public) businesses in the market?

That. Or, you have been shorting the company for some time, because you know it has been targeted for demolition. A PE takeover is the signal that you no longer need to hedge those shorts; the company, loaded with the debt used to purchase it, will soon go bankrupt, and you will be absolved of closing your short positions, for all practical purposes.

This may not apply to the subject of the article (PE firms buying medical establishments), but it may speak to the character of their new strategy. Perhaps they won't kill this goose because they payer has endlessly deep pockets.

fiprofessor|2 years ago

> A PE takeover is the signal that you no longer need to hedge those shorts; the company, loaded with the debt used to purchase it, will soon go bankrupt, and you will be absolved of closing your short positions, for all practical purposes.

I think it's just the opposite: you'll be forced to close your short position when the PE company buys. When PE firms "take over" a public firm, they generally take it private, and the takeover involves buying all outstanding shares, typically at a premium over current share prices.