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LBO Returns Case: Understanding IRR and Value Creation

Difficulty: Intermediate
Interviewer-led
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Times solved: < 100

A private equity firm acquires a company for an Enterprise Value of €1,000m, equivalent to €1.0bn. The transaction is financed with €600m of debt and €400m of sponsor equity.

After 5 years, the PE firm exits the investment and receives €1,800m, equivalent to €1.8bn, in equity proceeds.

Your task is to analyze the return profile, understand what could have driven the return, and assess the quality of the investment.

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A PE firm acquires a company for an Enterprise Value of €1,000m using €400m of sponsor equity. It exits the investment after 5 years and receives €1,800m in equity proceeds. What is the MOIC?

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Is this necessarily a good investment? Without calculating the exact IRR, how would you assess the return?

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What are the key drivers that explain the PE firm’s return?

Assume the following additional information:

  • Entry EBITDA: €100m
  • Entry Enterprise Value: €1,000m
  • Entry debt: €600m
  • Entry equity: €400m
  • Exit EBITDA: €150m
  • Exit Enterprise Value: €1,800m
  • Remaining debt at exit: €0m
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If the entry and exit multiples had been the same, could the PE firm still have achieved a strong return?

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How does the holding period impact IRR if the MOIC stays the same?

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What is a dividend recapitalization, and how would it affect returns and risk in this investment?

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What are the limitations of using IRR and MOIC to evaluate this investment?

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Based on everything discussed, how would you assess the quality of this investment?

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