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Private Equity Deal Thinking - LBO Decision Case

Difficulty: Intermediate
Interviewer-led
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You are advising a private equity firm that is evaluating the acquisition of a company with the following profile:

  • Stable EBITDA
  • Moderate revenue growth
  • Solid market position in a mature industry
  • Positive free cash flow generation
  • Regular CapEx and working capital needs to support growth

The PE firm wants to assess whether the company is a suitable LBO candidate, how the deal should be financed, and whether the investment should be pursued.

For each question, answer as if you were speaking in an interview. Focus on your reasoning, not on memorized definitions.

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A PE firm is evaluating this target. What are the first things you would assess before pursuing an LBO?

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The company has volatile revenues but high margins. Would this be a good LBO target?

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How would you think about the optimal capital structure for this LBO?

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Would this proposed debt structure look financeable? Please do a quick sanity check.

The PE firm is considering the following financing structure:

  • EBITDA: €80m
  • Purchase price: 9.0x EBITDA
  • Debt financing: 5.0x EBITDA
  • Average cash interest rate: 8.0%
  • Annual CapEx: €12m
  • Annual working capital investment: €5m
  • Annual cash taxes: €10m
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The PE firm is considering bank debt and high-yield debt. How would you compare the two financing options for this deal?

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The PE firm expects strong growth and wants to invest heavily post-acquisition. How does this impact the financing choice?

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Why does an LBO typically result in a lower valuation than a strategic buyer might be willing to pay?

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What are the biggest risks you would highlight before approving this deal?

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Based on everything discussed, would you recommend that the PE firm pursue this deal? Why or why not?

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Practice makes the difference
Practicing alone helps – with a partner it’s even better. Solve this question set in a realistic mock interview.
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