This week in charts
Electric vehicles
Rental housing
Commercial real estate
U.S. property loans
Semiconductors
Copper production
Solar industry
Provincial migration
The Little-Known Secret to the Success of Secondaries
Over the past decade the growth of the private equity market in secondaries — LP interests in funds sold to other investors — has skyrocketed, tripling to more than $130 billion in transactions each year. There are even funds dedicated solely to acquiring investor stakes in existing private equity portfolios, including a mammoth $22 billion one launched by Blackstone last year.
These secondaries have also posted the highest returns of any private asset class, according to one recent analysis. But critics suggest this action is due to a sleight of hand — the ability for buyers to mark up such assets almost immediately after purchase.
But secondaries have another, little discussed, advantage for buyers since the market began to take off in 2015. That year, the Financial Accounting Standards Board decided in a new rule that after purchasing LP interests at a discount, investors can mark them up to the NAV of the private equity fund.
The surge of interest in secondaries has happened at a time when investors are strapped for cash as they are receiving more capital calls from private equity firms than they are getting back in distributions from funds, according to a Preqin analysis reported by the Financial Times. It has also been spurred by the growth of evergreen funds, which have no finite end date and provide only limited distributions.
Chinese companies rush to tap US convertible bond market
Big Chinese companies are turning to the convertible bond market as a way of raising cheap cash from US hedge funds while circumventing investor concerns about political tensions between the two countries.
Traditional US equity fundraising routes such as initial public offerings and follow-on share sales have been almost completely shut to Chinese companies since the disastrous listing of rideshare group Didi in 2021, which delisted the following year after regulatory scrutiny.
In recent weeks, however, a string of large Chinese technology groups have raised billions of dollars through issuing convertible bonds. Such debt typically pays a lower coupon than conventional bonds, but can be converted into stock if a company’s valuation rises to a pre-agreed level.
This week’s fun finds
EdgePoint celebrates Philippines Independence Day with a Filipino moai
Wednesday, June 12, was the Philippines Independence Day. To celebrate, Juan and Miguel treated the team to some rich and flavourful Filipino dishes.
Filipino food is one of the original fusion cuisines, with influences including Spanish, Malaysian, Chinese and American traditions.
Here’s some quick Tagalog vocab that resonates well with EdgePoint:
Pamilya: family
Barkada: a group of friends or clique
Denmark recalls Korean ramen for being too spicy
Denmark has recalled several spicy ramen noodle products by South Korean company Samyang, claiming that the capsaicin levels in them could poison consumers.
It's unknown if any specific incidents in Denmark had prompted authorities there to take action.
*Note – In 2019, we tried some spicy Samyang noodles in the office. Take 1 went awry as we left too much water in our bowls and it wasn't spicy at all. We followed the instructions on Take 2 and, while we were sweating, we're surprised the heat levels would merit a recall.