Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Update on TXU Corporation LBO

In 2007, a group of private equity firms and investment banks bought TXU Corporation for $45 billion in the largest leveraged buyout transaction.  The company changed its name to Energy Future Holdings Corporation but the fact remains that it is in trouble.  This is due to lower gas prices (the U.S. fracking expansion) and demand (from the recession and jobless recovery).  Two years ago, the debt associated to the deal was trading at a discount.  As of March 31, 2013, KKR has thrown in the towel and is valuing the bonds at 0.05 of cost.

On April 15, the company proposed to re-structure its $32 billion in debt.  Equity owners would be wiped out and the senior debt owners and the original private equity consortium would split the company 85%/15%.  Already, distressed debt managers Franklin Templeton Investments, Apollo Global Management LLC, Centerbridge Partners and Third Point LLC are buying debt which would be converted to equity stakes in case of re-structuring or bankruptcy proceedings.

A few institutional investors were unlucky enough to have negotiated terms to invest directly in the buyout.  Others were only invested in the private equity funds leading the deal.  Some of them are the biggest pensions such as California State Teachers' Retirement System, California Public Employees' Retirement System, Washington State Investment Board, Oregon Public Employees' Retirement Fund, New Jersey Division of Investment and Pennsylvania State Employees' Retirement System.  According to TorreyCove Capital Partners LLC of La Jolla, California, KKR 2006, the fund with the TXU deal, will still have a higher return than the S&P 500 in 2012.  KKR 2006 returned 7.09% versus 3.25% for the index.  The privileged co-investors included California State Teachers' Retirement System and Government of Singapore Investment Corporation.  There is no word if either managed to offload their direct investments through the secondary market.

In another twist, some fund managers think that Energy Future Holdings could extend its debt into the future. Since 2009, the company has re-financed $25.7 billion of its debt.

The source for this article can be accessed here.

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