One lesson I've learned from millionaires is to always put your money to work, no matter how small. Even investing €200 per month can compound to tremendous wealth over decades. The key is to keep going!
My advice for who wants to grow financially this year, invest. Saving is good, but investing elevates your finances. Thanks to my financial advisor, my portfolio is thriving, and l'm proud of last year's decisions.
People often don't realize how important financial advisors are. Data from the last 50 years shows that people who work with CFAs usually earn more than those who don't. I've worked with a Adviser for 7 years, and now I have a $2 million portfolio.
I've stuck with ''Julianne Iwersen Niemann" for some years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She's quite known in her field, look her up..
What you also need to consider is that when doing recorded lectures, universities often pick their star professors / guest speakers and in the audience they place star students from various courses or even alumnis and MBA/EMBA students, just for people like you who then google “I wonder who these students are”
Only issue is there’s lots of people trying to put the basketball in the hoop. And people who don’t want you to. And people who are better at it than you.
Thanks John Poerink for giving this spectacular speech. My key takeaways as below. 1. PE is the manager of the whole process, so it's great to have an internal and third-party team to help with accounting, law, and strategy DD. 2. DD is not just looking at financials, is more about having a sense of how the business works and where are the opportunities 3. Never overpay. Multiple arbitrage is the key to a successful investment.
@@deonb.d4078 Two Reddit forums that are helpful for those doing consolidation plays are "QLA" and "Dan Pena Chaos". Two good youtube channels are "Elite acquisitions and investment banking" and "Jason Paul Rogers". "Independent sponsor update" youtube channel is helpful if you're doing deals as an independent sponsor.
This is a great overview of due diligence as a umbrella term for assessing if you should or should not do a deal (is the deal worth what you are paying for it)!
This is a good video in building a foundational level of what a PE group does but also note there are multiple different PE groups out there that buy a myriad of different assets. I work in commercial real estate and encounter PE groups offering on our properties for sale all the time. The speaker obviously works in a big time PE shop that has hundred of millions in capital to buy very large businesses - so definitely more time consuming and complex.
I find these lectures very helpful I am taking my associates online and can’t really participate on how to valuate a business because I’m busy learning about journal entries 😴. From private to corporate I find everything about it to be very interesting. I can’t wait to get into law class
Several thoughts 1. Very few women in this class. 2. This speaker, John Poerink, is running a 1 person Private Equity firm. 3. This guy looks like superman. 4. Overall a good presentation. I would have like to hear how they source deals. This issue is either a. companies don't want to sell b. companies sell price is too high c. companies have very weak businesses to sell d. hard to access to the business due to poor accounting and extreme comingling of funds.
Thanks for this insightful video, this is brilliant and quite captivating as well! I Invest my money in forex and it has really been favorable to me this season ever since I was recommended, I make good rewards from my investment on a weekly basis best regards to Mr. Ray Perkins mentorship/guidance 🇺🇸
This is so insightful, but also so 2011. There are no mentioning of digitalisation impact of companies future revenue potential and the role of Technology in TAM
From my understanding, if an investment is hitting solid numbers such as EBITDA of 40% per month and nice CF, the GP or Management Company should try to acquire another company to reduce the ROI/ Income of the Investment(s), in other words a goal should be to only give investors say 3% Return per month (vs 40%)... In other words try to cap the returns given out to LP's until he withdraws his investment (while growing the GP's portfolio in the long term).
If I’m not mistaken, the man at 1:09:55 explained the business model of Italic, an e-commerce retail startup that is gradually making headway with luxury brands. Interesting to see that his idea was shot down.
Targeting exit strategy when buying a business is detrimental to long-term growth of the business. Short-term gain for a PE firm leads to long-term damage to the business and its employees.
I wonder if the airline company he was talking about around 22:30 was WLFC, a family run company that leases airline parts. I was looking at them about 6 months ago and the family head offered an unfair take-private offer. Made profit on it but it was an unfair offer - eventually fell through. Still, interesting. It had a very strange capital structure and is now owned almost 70% by insiders (the family).
Anyway, the first thing we have to do as a private equity fund is sourcing and I guest it's the hardest part of the deal. The leactuarer give us the ovarall cocept of the deal relating to the fund and it's tremendous.
Not much said about how Private Equity is destroying small business in this, and other countries. The due diligence is based on 3 outcomes. Either sell the parts of the company to gain a quick profit, build up sales quickly (usually by purchasing cheaper product) and then flipping, or a combination of flipping smaller pieces and purchasing cheaper product to increase sales and then flip to another private equity company. Any of these outcomes, destroys the reputation of the company purchased, and many of these are smaller family owned companies. There are many stories of PE coming in and buying controlling interest in a successful company, and then leveraging it out so, that any other interest holding partner, end up with nothing. It's all just a matter of greed, and tends to rape and pillage successful small business. All this, and they use other peoples money to do it. The main problem with due diligence, is that it doesn't analyze what made the company successful in the first place, and possibly build from there. It's all based on flipping for a profit., at any cost.
I think that in getting to know the exit plan aside doing all the due diligence is to also look at the business from a lay man's view. is this company something I would buy into in some years to come? we tend to want to be always technical but we just have to simplistic and practical about things. my opinion though.
I wouldn't say a great speaker but certainly comes off as a very savvy professional in his field. tons of buzzwords and capital markets' slang and acronyms, which is not hard to understand after google research. Private Equity firms, either leveraged buyouts, VCs, seed funds, etc., seem to be a very elitist market.
So they are purchasing at multiples of annual earnings while keeping existing management? If free cashflow is greater than debt service + due dilligence checks out as well as relative strength to industry then go forward with the deal? And by roll up does he mean merging the companies together? New to this, thanks.
howabout investment banker who losesjobs now andthen..every 2yrys...meansleakageand big complains...on theground..hissing murders common murders but eventually for3 trillion buisness coupleof miiions or thousandora macdonald burger no..itsa lot of money..yes
If you work in finance or know enough about banking, can someone answer this question? Where can i learn about how the process of structured finance works regarding the details of buying and selling, and all of the things that are done in conjunction with buying and selling structured finance securities? Im aware that financial institutions trade the writes to collect other peoples debt in exchange for quick cash, after these debts are bundled up and often attached with a stock option to hedge potential defaults, and this is generally done in the risk department of corporate entities, between various banks, venture capital firms, pension funds, IBs, etc. But I want to interview someone who worked in the industry before so i can understand more the exact routine and process, and what goes into selection, and how business partners are chosen etc.
24:11 Probably worth another video on how do you walk through that PE door. That's also a big challenge from diversity point of view cause it's the same type of people normally this door opens for.
I disagree that you won't get better pricing from your suppliers when you increase your order 2-3 times, just because you are still much smaller than the dominant buyer. In most cases you can negotiate better prices if you increase your order size. Let alone as hugely as 2-3 times.
All I could learn from this video- everything is 'incredibly difficult'. Every area of Private Equity is 'incredibly difficult'. Ask him any question- and you know what his answer will be- incredibly difficult.
one question: in the video the guy said MULTIPLE is the major way to create value for PE, but I saw other PE ppl say it's hard to increase MULTIPLE these days, focus is more on revenue GROWTH. Is it just a style difference or is it another time? thx
C Lo its because there is too much money chasing too few good deals . Sellers are charging outrageous multiples on their companies and pe firms must pay up or risk losing the deal to another buyer. Since there is no more way up left to go, the only realistic way of creating value is increasing revenue.
One lesson I've learned from millionaires is to always put your money to work, no matter how small. Even investing €200 per month can compound to tremendous wealth over decades. The key is to keep going!
My advice for who wants to grow financially this year, invest. Saving is good, but investing elevates your finances. Thanks to my financial advisor, my portfolio is thriving, and l'm proud of last year's decisions.
People often don't realize how important financial advisors are. Data from the last 50 years shows that people who work with CFAs usually earn more than those who don't. I've worked with a Adviser for 7 years, and now I have a $2 million portfolio.
This is definitely considerable! think you could suggest any cfa I can get on the phone with? l'm in dire need of proper portfolio allocation.
I've stuck with ''Julianne Iwersen Niemann" for some years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She's quite known in her field, look her up..
I ran an online search on her name and came across her websiite; pretty well educated. thank you for sharing.
Great speaker, I like the way he engages the audience and makes his talk simple so that even those who haven't had experience in PE can understand.
I like the engagement also but you can barely hear what they are saying. I think the visual people were not considered when doing this lecture.
@@victory4172 111 it
@@victory4172 s
@@victory4172 ذتهتتتءءءءت
@@victory4172 شذته
this is insane.. the people in this room went on to do amazing things. The lady speaking at 14:30 is now a VP at Nike.
LMFAO bro just finds out how money nepotism works.
What you also need to consider is that when doing recorded lectures, universities often pick their star professors / guest speakers and in the audience they place star students from various courses or even alumnis and MBA/EMBA students, just for people like you who then google “I wonder who these students are”
buy low, sell high. the essence of every business in the world.
You can also buy high and sell higher
And buy higher and sell even higher
Put basketball in hoop. The essence of every basketball game.
Only issue is there’s lots of people trying to put the basketball in the hoop. And people who don’t want you to. And people who are better at it than you.
Not really.
Thanks John Poerink for giving this spectacular speech.
My key takeaways as below.
1. PE is the manager of the whole process, so it's great to have an internal and third-party team to help with accounting, law, and strategy DD.
2. DD is not just looking at financials, is more about having a sense of how the business works and where are the opportunities
3. Never overpay. Multiple arbitrage is the key to a successful investment.
Hello how can we communicate? I want to get in contact with an expert in LBO structuring and strategy
@@tytbeats319
There are some good sites and forums online that focus on this. Reply back if you want some guidance
@@RomilCPatel id like to check out those sites and forums
@@deonb.d4078
Two Reddit forums that are helpful for those doing consolidation plays are "QLA" and "Dan Pena Chaos".
Two good youtube channels are "Elite acquisitions and investment banking" and "Jason Paul Rogers". "Independent sponsor update" youtube channel is helpful if you're doing deals as an independent sponsor.
We do need more videos like this one! thanks Wharton!!
This is a great overview of due diligence as a umbrella term for assessing if you should or should not do a deal (is the deal worth what you are paying for it)!
Very insightful video, even in 2024. Big up Wharton
Great breakdown of day to day responsibilities of PE professionals!
So glad it was useful! We hope you'll consider subscribing to our channel for more news and insight from Wharton.
Definitely!
Amazing. You know that the content of the video if of a high quality when the time passes by really quick. Thank you for videos Wharton!
wrr
Hello how can we communicate? I want to get in contact with an expert in LBO structuring and strategy
This is a good video in building a foundational level of what a PE group does but also note there are multiple different PE groups out there that buy a myriad of different assets. I work in commercial real estate and encounter PE groups offering on our properties for sale all the time. The speaker obviously works in a big time PE shop that has hundred of millions in capital to buy very large businesses - so definitely more time consuming and complex.
Still a great session in 2020. Very interesting and informative to even just listen. Thanks for sharing!
Agreed
This is awesome exactly what I needed this guy is very straight forward with the information ℹ️
I find these lectures very helpful I am taking my associates online and can’t really participate on how to valuate a business because I’m busy learning about journal entries 😴. From private to corporate I find everything about it to be very interesting. I can’t wait to get into law class
This channel is literal Gold
A great teacher you're Mr Poerink, learn a lot about PE work!
Several thoughts
1. Very few women in this class.
2. This speaker, John Poerink, is running a 1 person Private Equity firm.
3. This guy looks like superman.
4. Overall a good presentation. I would have like to hear how they source deals. This issue is either
a. companies don't want to sell
b. companies sell price is too high
c. companies have very weak businesses to sell
d. hard to access to the business due to poor accounting and extreme comingling of funds.
11 years later and this is good!
Lots of Gold Nuggets.. Many thanks Wharton School and Mr. Poerink !!!
Listen in 2022 and still be the useful lecture
Wharton School of Business, graduating a-hole after a-hole since 1881.
Never had the chance to attend Wharton - thank you for this sharing.
Fabulous video. Very digestible.
Great video is Wharton near Philadelphia or Delaware? Great places!!!
Mood for the entirety of the video 34:07
It's good to see that even a professional finds accounting difficult enough to fail in it😂
Anyways an extremely useful session
Amazing lecture. Very enlightening. 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Thanks for this insightful video, this is brilliant and quite captivating as well! I Invest my money in forex and it has really been favorable to me this season ever since I was recommended, I make good rewards from my investment on a weekly basis best regards to Mr. Ray Perkins mentorship/guidance 🇺🇸
This is so insightful, but also so 2011. There are no mentioning of digitalisation impact of companies future revenue potential and the role of Technology in TAM
Hello how can we communicate? I want to get in contact with an expert in LBO structuring and strategy
W video, still rivals content 10 years later
From my understanding, if an investment is hitting solid numbers such as EBITDA of 40% per month and nice CF, the GP or Management Company should try to acquire another company to reduce the ROI/ Income of the Investment(s), in other words a goal should be to only give investors say 3% Return per month (vs 40%)... In other words try to cap the returns given out to LP's until he withdraws his investment (while growing the GP's portfolio in the long term).
Hello how can we communicate? I want to get in contact with an expert in LBO structuring and strategy
Fantastic video, do you have a video that explains the process of overseeing investments via the board?
The best revision lecture I hv had across youtube many thnx very interesting articles lessons on point👍💯
If I’m not mistaken, the man at 1:09:55 explained the business model of Italic, an e-commerce retail startup that is gradually making headway with luxury brands. Interesting to see that his idea was shot down.
This was also recorded in 2011 - ecommerce hadn't really taken off yet like it has today. But you are correct!
Targeting exit strategy when buying a business is detrimental to long-term growth of the business. Short-term gain for a PE firm leads to long-term damage to the business and its employees.
4:45 real start
Amazing lecture! Found it really useful
Very nice session,
I wonder if the airline company he was talking about around 22:30 was WLFC, a family run company that leases airline parts. I was looking at them about 6 months ago and the family head offered an unfair take-private offer. Made profit on it but it was an unfair offer - eventually fell through. Still, interesting. It had a very strange capital structure and is now owned almost 70% by insiders (the family).
Anyway, the first thing we have to do as a private equity fund is sourcing and I guest it's the hardest part of the deal. The leactuarer give us the ovarall cocept of the deal relating to the fund and it's tremendous.
Not much said about how Private Equity is destroying small business in this, and other countries. The due diligence is based on 3 outcomes. Either sell the parts of the company to gain a quick profit, build up sales quickly (usually by purchasing cheaper product) and then flipping, or a combination of flipping smaller pieces and purchasing cheaper product to increase sales and then flip to another private equity company. Any of these outcomes, destroys the reputation of the company purchased, and many of these are smaller family owned companies. There are many stories of PE coming in and buying controlling interest in a successful company, and then leveraging it out so, that any other interest holding partner, end up with nothing. It's all just a matter of greed, and tends to rape and pillage successful small business. All this, and they use other peoples money to do it. The main problem with due diligence, is that it doesn't analyze what made the company successful in the first place, and possibly build from there. It's all based on flipping for a profit., at any cost.
Amazing video
I think that in getting to know the exit plan aside doing all the due diligence is to also look at the business from a lay man's view. is this company something I would buy into in some years to come? we tend to want to be always technical but we just have to simplistic and practical about things. my opinion though.
Very useful insight, loved the practicality ! Thank you for sharing.
How long does it take to become a private equity guy? like to get started and all that other stuff?
So, what’s the incentive? For an investment bank to be honest? They want the fees
Great exchange of information. Thanks for sharing.
What is the annual loan pay down? That just had interest paid on the loan I believe
Nice lecture!! Emphasis on key fundamentals of PE business would be more useful.
I wouldn't say a great speaker but certainly comes off as a very savvy professional in his field. tons of buzzwords and capital markets' slang and acronyms, which is not hard to understand after google research. Private Equity firms, either leveraged buyouts, VCs, seed funds, etc., seem to be a very elitist market.
Translation: Money is to be earned by people with money.
elitist? hope you dont expect an average joe butcher decide one day that, tomorrow i will start a Private Equity firm..
Damn he worked for Les Wexner 😬😬
Who funded a certain guy who owned an island...
So they are purchasing at multiples of annual earnings while keeping existing management? If free cashflow is greater than debt service + due dilligence checks out as well as relative strength to industry then go forward with the deal? And by roll up does he mean merging the companies together? New to this, thanks.
i think what multiple you use depends on the industry/specific business, you could use EBITDA, earnings, some other approx of cash flow
@@hankvdg8982 Hello how can we communicate? I want to get in contact with an expert in LBO structuring and strategy
Very practical and helpful , thanks!
Very informative,, Thank you John
Very easy to understand. Thank you!
howabout investment banker who losesjobs now andthen..every 2yrys...meansleakageand big complains...on theground..hissing murders common murders but eventually for3 trillion buisness coupleof miiions or thousandora macdonald burger no..itsa lot of money..yes
If you work in finance or know enough about banking, can someone answer this question?
Where can i learn about how the process of structured finance works regarding the details of buying and selling, and all of the things that are done in conjunction with buying and selling structured finance securities?
Im aware that financial institutions trade the writes to collect other peoples debt in exchange for quick cash, after these debts are bundled up and often attached with a stock option to hedge potential defaults, and this is generally done in the risk department of corporate entities, between various banks, venture capital firms, pension funds, IBs, etc.
But I want to interview someone who worked in the industry before so i can understand more the exact routine and process, and what goes into selection, and how business partners are chosen etc.
24:11 Probably worth another video on how do you walk through that PE door.
That's also a big challenge from diversity point of view cause it's the same type of people normally this door opens for.
I disagree that you won't get better pricing from your suppliers when you increase your order 2-3 times, just because you are still much smaller than the dominant buyer.
In most cases you can negotiate better prices if you increase your order size. Let alone as hugely as 2-3 times.
Hello how can we communicate? I want to get in contact with an expert in LBO structuring and strategy
can we all take a moment to appreciate how all the aspiring PE analysts all dress the same way.....
Good Video, thank you
This was really good!
Great speaker
The value of an MBA is diminishing unfortunately...
(Coming from someone with a Wharton MBA).
True. Better go for specialised masters
Very informative video
JUSTICE OVER EQUITY!
Crude oil coming out of ground, and gas from it is environmental contaminated? From gas stations
All I could learn from this video- everything is 'incredibly difficult'. Every area of Private Equity is 'incredibly difficult'. Ask him any question- and you know what his answer will be- incredibly difficult.
but also fun..
Fantastic, thank you
great video!
Is it a must to come out of these Ivy league universities to make it huge 🤔 so u can't make it far from say getting a master in a state university?
Great lecture! Thanks for sharing!
good video, good discussion, but too superficial
Yancish why do you think so?
For reference he’s 6ft9
one question: in the video the guy said MULTIPLE is the major way to create value for PE, but I saw other PE ppl say it's hard to increase MULTIPLE these days, focus is more on revenue GROWTH. Is it just a style difference or is it another time? thx
C Lo its because there is too much money chasing too few good deals . Sellers are charging outrageous multiples on their companies and pe firms must pay up or risk losing the deal to another buyer. Since there is no more way up left to go, the only realistic way of creating value is increasing revenue.
Management evaluations... hmm this sounds easier than it is
Bellissimo
Skipped unit economics, esp for this type of retail model
Aswath Damodaran says "just say no"
Thx for sharing
Very good , thanks
very helpful, thanks
You're welcome, thanks for watching!
Due Diligence. 25:00 -
This Jeff’s boy
thank you so much
great talks :)
Speaking in circles. Why is Wharton expensive?
Timestamp 19:28
really interesting.
You need to have microphones in the room if you’re going to have this be interactive.
In all Dutchness
I asked Wharton if they could waive my toefl they haven’t even bothered to answer WTH
Upenn data science to be precise
4:50 Linus Torvald
Mire la miniatura y es igual a Mario Santos en el episodio que rescatan a la brigada b del FBI
He has a very Dutch NL accent. My due diligence concludes the professor is a Dutchy
love it
If John Cleese and Richard Spencer combined their genetic material to make a private equity expert
Hello how can we communicate? I want to get in contact with an expert in LBO structuring and strategy
Hernandez David Gonzalez Shirley Johnson Richard
Interesting.
Rodriguez Steven Brown Amy Harris Gary
very informative even though video is 9 yrs old