Leading private equity firms, including Bain Capital, KKR & Co. and MBK Partners, appeared to have turned to an exit mode in South Korea this year, cashing out their long-held assets at decent valuations, or slightly below their optimal prices.
The US private equity house has exited the botox and dermal filler brand for about double its acquisition price in four years. But the industry sources said Bain could have fetched a higher price if it had waited until Hugel's botox exports to China hit their stride.
Rather than taking time to maximize its return, Bain appeared to have focused on closing the divestiture, according to investment banking sources. The deal was signed on Aug. 24, just two days before the Bank of Korea raised its base rate by 25 basis points from a record-low 0.5%, signaling the liquidity party is over.
"It is meaningless now to ask around if company A is put on the market," said a senior official of a global investment bank.
"Now is the time to sell and cash out of assets for whatever reason. If you are a smart PEF, it's time to pack up and go home before the party is over."
Putting an end to its 15-month ultra-easy monetary stance, Bank of Korea Governor Lee Ju-yeol on Thursday told a news conference that the rate increase was the first step taken by the central bank to normalize its monetary policy, hinting at additional rate hikes within the year.
Its rate increase comes as the US Federal Reserve is expected to cut back on its bond-buying programs in the near future to contain inflationary pressures.
Higher interest rates could prod pension funds and institutional investors, major sources of capital to PEFs, to tighten their pursestrings on M&A deals in search of other investment options.
"If money dries up in the market, PEFs may need to take another two to three years to cash them out," another investment banker told Market Insight.
"Now seems to be the time for PEFs to take decisive action to cash out even slightly below their desired price." He added that PEFs need to make the most of the remaining market liquidity to show "their art of exit."
Higher valuations, triggered by the aggressive pricing by strategic bidders, held them back from participating in high-profile buyout transactions. They were also outmaneuvered by smaller domestic competitors, armed with new money from small-sized Korean companies and low-profile institutional investors.
Instead of bidding up the price for new targets, big-name PEFs switched into minority stake purchases and selling their long-held assets to cash-rich medium-sized conglomerates which brought additional liquidity to the country's M&A market this year.
Some bankers say the fast spread of the Delta variant of COVID-19 has saved time for PEFs to exit their assets, forcing the US Fed to push back the timing of its tapering of asset purchases.
Now that Fed officials spoke up about its tapering sooner than the market had expected, PEFs are likely to step up their efforts for divestments.
Seoul-based Hahn & Co. is in the process of selling its 70% stake in Hanon Systems Corp., the country's leading heat pump systems supplier for carmakers. The stake sale is expected to fetch over 6 trillion won ($5.1 billion), in what would be this year's largest acquisition deal in South Korea.