
Billions keep flowing into private equity funds. The reason is simple. The funds -- especially the big ones -- have posted strong returns. Does this then mean that public shareholders are getting a raw deal?
Well, over the past few months, shareholders have been getting much more aggressive on buyouts. The latest example is the buyout of
Aramark. The company is a leader in providing food services, facilities management and even uniform apparel. There are roughly 240,000 employees.
Early this year, the company sold out to a variety of private equity firms, such as GS Capital Partners (NYSE:
GS), CCMP Capital Advisors, J.P. Morgan Partners (NYSE:
JPM), Thomas H. Lee Partners and
Warburg Pincus LLC. About 250 Aramark senior managers also invested in the deal.
The initial buyout price was $32 in cash, which was a bit of a disappointment for public shareholders and lawsuits ensued. This certainly
paid off as now, the buyers have agreed to a new price of $33.80. True, this does not sound like a lot, but it does amount to $222 million in extra consideration (the Delaware court approved the settlement this week).
It's also probably a sign of things to come in the buyout game.
Tom Taulli is the author of various books, including the Complete M&A Handbook and the EDGAR-Online Guide to Decoding Financial Statements.