How Private Equity Consumed America
Summary
TLDRThe video script explores the concept of private equity, discussing its theoretical appeal and contrasting it with the realities of its impact on companies like Yahoo and Marsh Supermarkets. It details how private equity firms operate, leveraging their connections to raise funds, using leveraged buyouts to magnify returns, and focusing on growth to maximize profits. The script highlights the potential downsides, including job losses, increased costs for consumers, and the risk of bankruptcy for acquired companies. It also touches on the tax advantages enjoyed by general partners and the emotional detachment that can lead to exploitative practices. The narrative concludes with a reflection on the human consequences of private equity's focus on efficiency and cost-cutting, rather than fostering innovation and collaboration within the companies they acquire.
Takeaways
- 💼 **Private Equity Basics**: Private equity (PE) firms invest in companies, restructure them for growth, and then sell for a profit.
- 📉 **Yahoo's Decline**: Yahoo, once more valuable than Amazon and Apple combined, declined after rejecting a Microsoft buyout, eventually being sold to Verizon for a fraction of its peak value.
- 🛒 **Asset Sales for Survival**: Apollo Global Management, a private equity firm, sold off non-core Yahoo assets to focus on its successful divisions like Yahoo Finance and Yahoo Sports.
- 🔑 **Leadership Changes**: Experienced businessman Jim Lanzone was brought in to lead Yahoo, leveraging his past success in turning around Ask.com.
- 🚀 **Yahoo's Transformation**: Through strategic sales and focusing on core strengths, Yahoo became profitable again, indicating a potential path towards an IPO.
- 🤝 **General Partners' Role**: General partners in PE firms are industry veterans with strong networks, crucial for raising investment capital.
- 💰 **Firm Profitability**: PE firms typically charge a 2% annual fee on funds under management and take 20% of profits above a certain benchmark, which can lead to significant earnings for general partners.
- 📈 **Leveraged Buyouts**: PE firms often use leveraged buyouts, where they borrow money to buy companies, amplifying potential returns but also risks.
- 🏬 **Marsh Supermarkets Case**: The decline of Marsh Supermarkets under Sun Capital's ownership illustrates the potential negative consequences of PE ownership, including bankruptcy and job losses.
- 🛍️ **Consequences of PE Ownership**: Private equity ownership can lead to store closures, service quality declines, and increased costs for consumers.
- ⚖️ **Tax Advantages**: The carried interest loophole allows PE general partners to pay lower taxes on their income, further incentivizing aggressive profit maximization.
Q & A
What is the basic concept of private equity?
-Private equity involves funds taking investor money to buy companies, restructuring them, growing their worth, and then selling them for a profit after a few years.
What was Yahoo's market capitalization at its peak in the early 2000s?
-Yahoo's market capitalization reached a high watermark of over $125 billion.
Why did Yahoo ultimately decline and sell to Verizon?
-Yahoo declined due to a series of strategic mistakes, including rejecting a $44.6 billion purchase bid by Microsoft in 2008, which led to a decade of decline and eventual sale to Verizon for $4.8 billion.
Which private equity firm bought Yahoo from Verizon?
-Apollo Global Management, a large private equity firm previously headed by Leon Black, bought Yahoo from Verizon.
What was Jim Lanzone's previous experience that made him a suitable candidate to lead Yahoo's turnaround?
-Jim Lanzone had experience turning around Ask.com, leading CBS's digital business through a merger with Viacom, and briefly serving as CEO of Tinder in 2020.
What assets did Apollo and the new leadership team of Yahoo sell off to focus on the company's core?
-They sold off Yahoo! Japan to SoftBank for $1.6 billion and Edgecast, a streaming technology company, for $300 million.
What were the two key Yahoo divisions that maintained their reputation and were chosen to double-down on success?
-The two key divisions were Yahoo Finance and Yahoo Sports.
How does the general partner in a private equity firm typically raise money?
-The general partner starts by investing a couple of million dollars of their own money and then pitches investors on their ability to manage the fund, often highlighting specific industry experience and a track record of success.
What are the two main ways private equity firms make money?
-Private equity firms make money by taking a 2% annual fee on all money in the fund and a 20% fee on any returns above a predetermined hurdle rate.
What is a leveraged buyout and how does it impact potential earnings and losses for a private equity firm?
-A leveraged buyout is when a private equity firm uses a combination of its own money and borrowed money to purchase a company. This magnifies the potential earnings but also increases the potential losses.
What is the typical impact on headcount at public companies bought by private equity?
-On average, headcount at public companies bought by private equity shrinks by 12% over the following two years.
How does private equity investment affect the likelihood of a company going bankrupt?
-Companies acquired by private equity firms through leveraged buyouts are found to be 10 times more likely to go bankrupt in the following ten years than those that are not.
Outlines
💼 The Private Equity Model and Yahoo's Transformation
Private equity is presented as a theoretical concept where funds invest in struggling companies, restructure them, and sell for profit. The story of Yahoo serves as an example of a company that declined after failing to sell to Microsoft. Yahoo was later bought by Apollo Global Management, a private equity firm, which implemented a strategy led by Jim Lanzone to focus on core assets like Yahoo Finance and Yahoo Sports, leading to a potential IPO and profitability.
🤝 The Structure and Operation of Private Equity Firms
Private equity firms operate through general partners who use their connections to raise funds from investors. These partners invest their own money and pitch to investors, often focusing on sectors they have experience in. The firms earn money through a 2% annual fee and a 20% performance fee on returns over a benchmark. This structure incentivizes growth and can lead to significant wealth for general partners, who often use leveraged buyouts to magnify potential earnings.
📉 The Downside of Private Equity: The Marsh Supermarkets Case
Marsh Supermarkets, a regional grocery chain, is used to illustrate the negative outcomes of private equity ownership. Despite a strong local presence, the company struggled under Sun Capital's ownership, which focused on short-term gains through asset sales and cost-cutting. This strategy eventually led to the company's bankruptcy, highlighting the potential for private equity to strip companies of their long-term viability while still benefiting the firm through management fees and asset commissions.
🛒 The Impact of Private Equity on Local Communities and Workers
The closure of Marsh Supermarkets had significant impacts on local communities and employees. The loss of local grocery stores and pharmacies affected access to fresh food and healthcare services. Employees faced pension fund underfunding, leading to financial insecurity. The narrative suggests that private equity's focus on efficiency and cost-cutting often leads to negative consequences for consumers and employees, with a lack of empathy due to the distance between decision-makers and those affected.
🤖 The Incentives and Consequences of Private Equity Practices
The narrative discusses the incentives within the private equity industry that drive firms to prioritize growth and efficiency, often at the expense of long-term sustainability. The structure of the industry, with its focus on short-term profits and the use of leverage, can lead to brutal cost-cutting measures and exploitation of employees. The general partners' compensation model, which includes a significant performance-based component, exacerbates this focus on immediate gains rather than building for the future.
📚 Learning About AI and STEM with Brilliant
The script concludes with a sponsorship message for Brilliant, an educational platform offering courses on complex STEM subjects, including large language models like ChatGPT. The courses are designed to be accessible and practical, breaking down complex topics into manageable parts and using interactive exercises to build understanding. The platform is praised for making learning part of daily life and for its effectiveness in teaching traditionally challenging subjects.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Private Equity
💡Yahoo
💡Leveraged Buyout
💡General Partner
💡
💡Management Fee
💡Hurdle Rate
💡Sale-Leaseback
💡Sun Capital
💡Artificial Intelligence (AI)
💡Brilliant
💡Efficiency Gains
Highlights
Private equity funds invest in struggling companies, restructure them, and aim to sell for a profit.
Yahoo's market value once exceeded $125 billion but was later sold to Verizon for $4.8 billion.
After Verizon, Apollo Global Management acquired Yahoo for $5 billion, seeking to extract value from the web services company.
Jim Lanzone, with experience turning around Ask.com, was chosen to lead Yahoo's transformation.
Lanzone's strategy involved selling off non-core assets and focusing on Yahoo's key assets like Yahoo Finance and Yahoo Sports.
Ryan Spoon and Tapan Bhat were appointed to lead Yahoo Sports and Yahoo Finance, respectively, to capitalize on their past successes.
Yahoo's transformation included bolstering sports betting offerings and growing subscription-based platforms.
Despite being private, Yahoo's health indicators suggest profitability and a potential IPO.
Private equity firms like Apollo are structured around General Partners who leverage their connections to raise funds.
General Partners earn a 2% annual fee and a 20% performance fee based on returns above a set hurdle.
The use of leveraged buyouts allows private equity firms to acquire companies with a small percentage of their own funds.
Marsh Supermarkets' decline under Sun Capital Partners illustrates the potential downsides of private equity ownership.
Private equity ownership has been linked to job losses, higher mortality rates in nursing homes, and increased bankruptcy risks.
The general partners' focus on growth can lead to cost-cutting measures that have negative human consequences.
The private equity model incentivizes exploitation and profit maximization, often at the expense of employees and consumers.
Brilliant offers a course on large language models, providing an understanding of AI's groundbreaking technology.
Brilliant's teaching method breaks down complex subjects into intuitive principles and interactive exercises.
Transcripts
Private Equity is a great idea… in theory. Funds take investor money, buy a bunch of fledgling
or faltering companies, shuffle around their structure and leadership and operating model,
grow their worth, then sell them a few years later for a profit. What’s wrong with that?
For example: do you remember Yahoo? In the early 2000s, it was an icon of the early internet. It
was consistently worth more than Amazon and Apple combined. Its market-cap reached a high
water mark of over $125 billion. But today, it’s known for what it isn’t—after rejecting a $44.6
billion purchase bid by Microsoft in 2008, a decade of decline led to its eventual sale to
Verizon for a humiliating $4.8 billion. Verizon then merged the company with AOL, previously
bought for $4.4 billion, but after the downward trend continued Verizon finally sold the combined
company for just $5 billion—an enormous loss. The buyer was Apollo Global Management—a behemoth
private equity firm previously headed by Leon Black until his $158 million in payments to
Jeffrey Epstein emerged in the media. Through the years, Apollo has owned and transformed
companies like ADT, Chuck E. Cheese’s, Qdoba, and AMC Theaters, but this time,
they believed there was value to be had in the beleaguered web services company, Yahoo.
For their strategy to work, they needed a leader, and for that they turned to
experienced businessman Jim Lanzone. Part of the reasoning was surely that this wouldn’t
be the first time Lanzone attempted to turn around a faltering internet business. He made
a name for himself while working at Ask.com. This company started as Ask Jeeves—an early
and promising competitor in the search engine space focused on natural-language processing,
much like today’s AI-driven chatbots. Google, of course, won that competition, so the company
pivoted its business model to center on questions and answers, rather than search,
and correspondingly rebranded as Ask.com. It was around then that Jim Lanzone was appointed CEO,
and while always overshadowed by the company’s fall from its promising early days, Lanzone was
recognized as having finished his term as CEO with the company on a firmer footing,
and is therefore credited for its continued survival. In the years that followed,
Lanzone went on to lead CBS’s digital business leading up to its massive merger with ViaCom, and
then was briefly CEO of Tinder in 2020, so Apollo believed he had all the experience for the job.
This new leadership team, CEO Lanzone and investor Apollo, started by selling off extraneous yet
valuable assets Yahoo had acquired through the years—they wanted to focus on the company’s core,
rather than just acting as a collection of random revenue-creating resources that managed
to survive through time. So the key assets of the comparatively strong and independently
operated Yahoo! Japan were sold off to its other owner, SoftBank, for $1.6 billion, then Edgecast,
a streaming technology company that the former owner had grouped into the Yahoo/AOL merger,
was sold for $300 million. With just those two sales and the $2 billion they brought in,
Apollo was reportedly able to more-or-less recoup what it had borrowed to finance
the purchase of Yahoo in the first place. The key next step was facing reality—recognizing
that Yahoo was no longer truly a search engine, it was no longer an internet homepage, and it
was hardly even an email provider anymore—really, Yahoo was simply just whatever still worked. And
what worked was clear: Yahoo Finance and Yahoo Sports. Through the years, each had maintained
and gained a reputation as the best places to go for investing and sports news and data.
So to double-down on success, they once again hired from experience—Ryan Spoon’s time at ESPN
and BetMGM gave him context into the fantasy sports audience that drives so much of Yahoo
Sports’ traffic, so he was tapped to be that division’s president. Tapan Bhat’s time as
Chief Product Officer of NerdWallet informed his experience in the wants of the newest generation
of retail investors, so he was appointed general manager of Yahoo Finance. Structurally,
within Yahoo, each of these core divisions was given a high degree of autonomy to build out
unique product offerings for their specific customer-bases—Yahoo Sports started work to
bolster its sports betting offerings, including acquiring sector-startup Wagr in 2023. Yahoo
Finance focused on growing its subscription-based offerings, and its Yahoo Finance Plus platform,
offering advanced trading tools and data, is reported to now have more than two million
customers and double-digit year-over-year growth. The details of what Apollo and this new leadership
team are doing go on and on, but in short, Yahoo has gone through a transformation marked
by cutting off its appendages, reinforcing its core, and it’s working—while obscured by the lack
of reporting requirements due to its private ownership, all indications suggest that the
company is, while smaller, as healthy as its been in decades, and the CEO has said that it’s on the
path towards IPO and is “very profitable.” However Apollo exits this investment,
it will almost certainly yield them a tremendous return. And it’d be fair to argue they will have
deserved it—they came in, took a risk, found a new leadership team, developed a viable
strategy, then shepherded the company through a transformation. They took an obsolete institution
and brought it back into relevancy. And this is exactly what the private equity industry
would like you to believe private equity is. Structurally, private equity firms are not
complicated. Their cores are the General Partner. General partners typically know
the right people—it is not an entry level job. To take the example of a rather random,
rather unremarkable firm, J.W. Childs Associates was founded by general partner John W. Childs
after a long and successful stint at Thomas H. Lee Partners, founded by Thomas H. Lee.
Thomas H. Lee founded his firm after a long stint at the First National Bank of Boston,
where he rose to the rank of Vice President. Other examples of private equity general partners
include Mitt Romney of Bain Capital, who was also the 2012 Republican nominee for president,
and Steven Schwarzman of Blackstone, the 34th wealthiest person in the world.
These connections are crucial thanks to step two in the process—raising money. Typically
general partners start by throwing in a couple million of their own money, to set the stakes,
then they’ll go around pitching investors on why they’re the best person to manage the investors’
money. Often it has something to do with having particular experience in a particular industry
that is particularly attractive for particular reasons—in the case of J.W. Childs, he likely went
around arguing that he had a particular knack for investing in consumer food and beverage companies
since at his prior firm he had helped arrange the buyout of Snapple for $135 million in 1992, which
his firm sold two years later for $1.7 billion after massive revenue-growth. And he’d likely
argue that food and beverage companies are great for investment since people have to eat and drink,
and therefore the sector is less subject to the cycles of the market than something like tech.
This sort of stability is particularly attractive to the massive institutions that make up the core
of private equity investors—in John W. Childs’ case, insurance companies like
Northwestern Mutual or employee pension funds like the Bayer Corporation Master
Trust. Individuals can theoretically invest in PE funds, but only if they hold enormous
wealth—it varies dramatically, but many funds have minimum investments upwards of $25 million.
Meanwhile, the way private equity firms themselves make money is remarkably consistent—they just take
two percent of it. Two percent, of all money, each year, is taken as a fee, regardless of whether or
not the firm actually grows the investment. But then to incentivize returns, the firm also sets
a benchmark, called a hurdle, that they’re aiming to beat in year-over-year investment growth—say,
7%. Any money earned on top of that hurdle is then subject to a 20% fee that goes back to
the firm. So, say, if a fund was originally worth $100 million but grew to $110 million, $3 million
would be subject to that performance fee and so 20% of it, $600,000, would go back to the firm.
In practice, what’s earned from the 2% base fee is fairly consistent, since there are generally
restrictions as to when investors can take money out of the fund so the sum does not
generally fluctuate rapidly—therefore, firms typically earmark this base fee for covering
basic operating costs like office rent and analyst salaries. But how much is made from the 20% fee
varies enormously—some years it could be nothing, others it could be yacht money,
especially since the gains from that fee are generally distributed primarily to the general
partner. This is how general partners like John W. Childs become billionaires. And even better:
the money from these fees is not considered traditional income by the American tax
authorities—it’s considered capital gains. Despite the fact that these earnings do not
truly come from investment by the general partners themselves, the IRS treats them as if they do and
therefore only about 20% goes to taxes, versus the 37% they’d pay on traditional income.
So, considering it’s the primary source of their wealth, the general partner is massively
incentivized to maximize their firm’s gains, and to supercharge this to the next level they almost
all rely on one simple trick—they don’t actually invest their own money, at least primarily. Now,
if a $100 million fund bought a $100 million company and increased its value by 25%,
they’d gain $25 million. But, if a $100 million fund bought a $400 million company and increased
its value by the same multiple, they’d gain $100 million—they’d 2x the fund’s value. And believe it
or not, a $100 million fund can buy a $400 million company… as long as they have a friendly banker.
This is what’s referred to as a leveraged buyout—the fund puts in some of their money,
but primarily relies on borrowed money to pay the seller, just like a homebuyer with a mortgage.
This magnifies the potential earnings, but in turn, of course, the potential losses.
But it’s worth considering what this does for the General Partner. In a $100 million fund buying a
$400 million company with 75% borrowed money, very small margins of growth can make all the
difference for this one individual. With a 7% hurdle and 7.5% growth, 20% of the margin above
7% on that $400 million company would earn this individual $400,000 But if, instead,
the company reached 7.75% growth, the general partner would earn $600,000—because of this
amplifying effect, every quarter of a percent growth, a rather small difference, earns the
general partner another $200,000 in income. It’s also worth considering that it really
doesn’t matter exactly how this value is created. For every miraculous Yahoo-turnaround
story there’s a Marsh Supermarkets. At no point did Marsh reach the size
or level of national ubiquity as Yahoo—if you aren’t from Indiana or Western Ohio,
you’ve likely never heard of Marsh SuperMarket. Yet, while confined to just two states, Marsh
Supermarkets and its private equity takeover, exemplifies a pattern that spans all fifty.
The first Marsh opened here, a small local grocer catering to specific local needs in Muncie,
Indiana in 1931. The simple concept took. Weathering the Great Depression,
then outlasting World War II, the budding Indiana institution began to expand: by the 1950s there
were 16 Marsh locations across the state, by 1952 there was a Marsh distribution center in Yorktown,
Indiana, and by 1956, the store was expanding into Ohio. As demands changed in the ‘60s,
the company adjusted. Marsh Foodliners became Marsh SuperMarkets, growing in size to accommodate
one-stop shopping. Diversifying as decades progressed, the company also established its
own convenience store: The Village Pantry, its own bargain bin store: Lobill Foods, and eventually
purchased its own upscale grocers in O’Malia Foods and Arthur’s Fresh Market. Blanketing urban
and suburban Indiana and western Ohio, Marsh and Marsh properties were a mainstay through the ‘90s
and 2000s. And it was at about this time that Sun Capital became interested in the company.
Today, there are zero Marsh locations. In 2017, unable to keep up with rent payments
and struggling to pay vendors, the company filed for chapter 7 bankruptcy, closing
every last location and liquidating all remaining assets. Like an empire spread too thin, Marsh had
reached its territorial epoch before collapsing in on itself within just two decades—all on a
timeline that rather neatly lines up with the brand’s time under Sun Capital’s ownership.
Now, Sun Capital Partners didn’t instigate the regional grocer’s fall from grace. Prior to the
sale, Marsh had expensively failed to expand into Chicago; it had felt the revenue squeeze from
encroaching box stores; and it watched Krogers parade into its grocery market. In response,
the company began to fall behind, failing to modernize its stores or products, backing out of
sponsorship deals with the Indiana State Fair, and opening itself up to the possibility of selling.
In an atmosphere of supermarket consolidation, though, there wasn’t much interest in the
struggling chain… not until someone noticed in a footnote in the company’s financial report that
the company held a rather robust real estate portfolio. A $325 million purchase point then
became more palatable, and in early 2006, Sun Capital jumped, paying $88 million in
cash and assuming $237 million of debt. To Sun Capital, the deal was a can’t lose
proposition—either they’d turn around and flip a bloated business, or they’d sell the assets,
assets which just in real estate have been estimated to be worth $238 to $360 million.
Under new ownership, things changed quickly: they pared management, they sold the company jet, and
with the money saved, they renovated storefronts. Sales went up. Then came more maneuvering,
but less the kind that would help bump sales. Almost immediately after Sun Capital took over,
store locations went up for sale: this one for $750,000, this one for $2.15 million,
and this one for $1.2 million. They’d stay operating as Marsh stores, but they’d now
be paying a lease while Sun Capital would collect an unspecified commission on the sales. They even
went as far as selling the company headquarters for a reported $28 million before then straddling
the grocer with a 20-year lease increasing on a 7% clip every five years. This maneuver is
called a sale-leaseback, and it's quite common in private equity, because at least on paper,
it makes sense for both parties. Marsh Supermarket properties were no exception as they could boost
dividends or provide capital for another leveraged buyout for Sun Capital, while also
helping the grocer to pay down debt and provide investment flexibility in the short term. But
as for the consequences accompanying that long, escalating lease on company headquarters—along
with cost-saving moves like carrying name brand products, cutting staff, and contracting out more
and more services—well, Sun Capital just hoped it wouldn’t have to deal with them. As early as 2009,
news bubbled to the surface that they were trying to sell the grocery chain.
But to the dismay of Sun Capital, the new, leaner, streamlined Marsh just wouldn’t sell.
Ultimately, the new-owner business boost was short-lasted, and in 2017, the grocer would go out
of business with Sun Capital at the helm until the very day it filed for bankruptcy. To Sun Capital,
failing to sell was a missed opportunity in a company overhaul that they would deem a loss,
as the group ultimately came $500,000 short of recouping their investment
into the chain grocery store. But even in a loss the private
equity firm won. They still collected their management fee each year of ownership,
afterall. They also collected their commission on sold assets as the company spun off its property
at seemingly every turn. Really, the only loss was that they just didn’t win more.
The same couldn’t be said about the consumers or employees, though. Deeply embedded in Indiana
and Ohios’ urban areas, Marsh locations provided healthier, fresher alternatives in areas at risk
of fading into food deserts. Beyond nostalgia, residents who lost their local grocery and
pharmacy were mad, confused, and lost with the disappearance of a longtime local institution.
Then there were the people that worked for Marsh. According to Washington Post reporting,
at the onset of Sun Capital’s ownership only one of three retirement plans was agreed to be fully
funded by the new ownership—unsurprisingly, the executives’ plan. As for store employees,
their pension went underfunded by some $32 million dollars, which fell not on Sun Capital
to even out, but to the government insurer. As for warehouse workers, Marsh owed some $55 million at
the time of bankruptcy to their pension which was already struggling to pay out full checks.
Ultimately, Marsh Supermarkets as a business and Sun Capital as a private equity firm are
relatively small potatoes. But their ill-fated 11-years speak to a larger
pattern in American life. Private equity quietly maneuvers, takes over, reorganizes,
and moves on while consumers and employees grapple with the consequences. Private equity fixates on
industries: regional grocery chains like Marsh; casual restaurant chains like Red Lobster;
odd-end industries like animal retail and veterinary care; and, most unnervingly, the most
consequential industry of them all in healthcare. In most cases, only the sharpest-eyed consumer
notices the subtle changes, but frequently enough, private equity’s internal tinkering
turns things sideways. The local market goes out of business, the menu items track upward in price,
the understaffed and over-priced veterinary clinic’s care drops in quality, the elderly home’s
staff unintentionally neglects a call for help. All this happens in the name of efficiency gains,
cost-cutting, and corporate streamlining—bad outcomes not even private equity firms can deny.
On average, headcount at public companies bought by private equity shrinks by 12% over
the following two years, translating to thousands upon thousands of layoffs. PE-owned nursing homes
see 11% higher mortality rates than the non-PE owned counterparts, summing to a total of 1,000
excess deaths per year. Companies acquired by private equity firms through leveraged buyouts are
found to be 10 times more likely to go bankrupt in the following ten years than those that are not.
Theories abound as to why a benign structure leads to such malignant results. But none are
surprising. They all have to do with what happens when one shrinks a conglomeration of hundreds or
thousands of people, their relations, their creativity, their capabilities,
their faults, their everything down to a deluge of figures on a spreadsheet. The stories of a private
equity firm going in, working on the human level, changing the fundamental culture of a
company in a way that strengthens collaboration, creativity, innovation towards the end of just
creating a stronger, more competitive product for their customers are tough to come by. The stories
of a private equity firm going in, hiking pricing after their analysts told them they could, hiring
lobbyists to create more favorable legislative conditions, initiating mass layoffs for divisions
that are not yet profitable, saddling companies with debt in complex financial maneuvers,
shuffling assets around to create the illusion of transformation, sacrificing future potential
for present-day returns—those stories, and their calamitous human results, go on and on and on.
Exploitation is easy without emotion. When the person making decisions is the same
person unlocking the door each morning, it is much more difficult for them to profit off of
their employees' suffering. They have to face the consequences of their greed face-to-face,
and that’s uncomfortable. When the person making decisions is the boss of the vice
president who’s senior associate manages the associate who sits on the portfolio company
board which appoints the CEO who’s direct report manages the division who’s vice president manages
the regional manager who oversees the branch manager that unlocks the door each morning,
exploitation in the name of profit is easier. And those small number of individuals at the top,
the general partners, have all the incentive in the world to exploit on the margins.
Because of the compensation model, the industry is focused on growth at all costs—after all,
without gangbusters growth, the person whose name is on the sign doesn’t get paid. And finally,
with a massive 20% of over-hurdle performance multiplied by leverage then paid out to the firm,
tiny margins of difference—say, outsourcing HR to a third-party firm that is less effective yet
cheaper—make all the difference on the general partner’s annual income. The incentives push
towards brutality, then this brutality is shielded by layers of bureaucracy, and finally the US
government rewards the brutality by subjecting the gains from it to a lower tax rate. It’s a great
system, assuming you happen to be the general partner of an American private equity firm.
As you may know, the latest fixation of the finance world—even beyond just private equity—is
artificial intelligence. Many investors believe that it's as groundbreaking a technology as the
internet, and so it’s probably worth learning how it actually works. For that, I’d recommend our
sponsor Brilliant. They have a fantastic course on how large language models like ChatGPT work which,
surprisingly, I didn’t find all that complicated to understand. But that’s potentially thanks to
Brilliant—they specialize in teaching complex STEM subjects by breaking them down into small chunks
that they teach through intuitive principles and interactive exercises. As you keep going, they
bring these small, disparate concepts together until you understand something massive, like how a
large language model, or calculus, or programming works. Personally, as someone who always struggled
in traditional STEM education, I find it really satisfying to gain this sort of understanding in
topics that I’d always thought were out of reach, and it’s really useful for when something like
LLMs become relevant to so many other things. And another aspect I really appreciate about Brilliant
is that they really understand the practicalities of how people actually learn—we don’t all have
time to sit down and watch an hour-long lecture or something, so that’s why they break their courses
down into such small, digestible chunks which you can complete on your computer, or on your phone
or tablet while you’re on the bus or waiting at the doctor’s office or in other small moments in
your day. Through this, you can make learning part of your daily habit of self-improvement,
just in the time you might otherwise spend scrolling social media. Brilliant is one
of our longest-term sponsors since so many viewers find it a worthwhile service to use,
so I think it’s worth at least giving it a shot. And you can super-easily since you can
try everything Brilliant has to offer, for free, for a full thirty days at Brilliant.org/Wendover,
and you’ll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription at that same link.
5.0 / 5 (0 votes)