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January 16, 2026

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Archives for February 15, 2024

New Heritage Exits Investment in Carnegie

February 15, 2024 by John McNulty

New Heritage Capital has sold its investment in Carnegie Dartlet, a provider of business and marketing services to colleges and universities, to Shamrock Capital.

Carnegie Dartlet specific capabilities include research, digital marketing, lead generation, financial aid optimization, and website development. The company, led by CEO Jonathan Clues, is headquartered 30 miles northwest of Boston in Westford, Massachusetts.

Carnegie Dartlet was founded in 1984 by Joe Moore and began as a print magazine focused on connecting prospective students to higher education institutions. Over the past 30 years, the company has led the college recruitment sector in transforming from print to digital marketing.

New Heritage first invested in Carnegie Dartlet in October 2020 by partnering with the company’s founders to provide them with both liquidity and capital to finance future growth.

During Heritage’s ownership term, Carnegie closed  six add-on acquisitions including Underscore (May 2021), mStoner (October 2021), Maguire Associates (July 2022), National Small College Enrollment Conference (January 2023), CLARUS (March 2023), and Fire Engine RED (December 2023). Today, Carnegie Dartlet has more than 390 employees and over 750 university clients.

“Alongside Heritage, the company has built upon its modern solution for higher education customers. We’re excited to continue investing in our team, adding and integrating new capabilities, and pushing the boundaries of innovation,” said Gary Colen, the CEO of Carnegie.

“It has been a pleasure working with the Carnegie team and we are incredibly proud of what the team has been able to accomplish during our partnership,” said Nickie Norris, a senior partner at Heritage. “Heritage is solely focused on partnering with strong founder-owned businesses such as Carnegie to help them unlock their full potential – we are excited to follow their continued success.”

“Carnegie has always held the personalized, high-quality experience that it provides to its college and university partners as its highest priority,” said Mr. Moore. “Heritage enabled us to maintain this commitment, while also supporting our investment in the Carnegie team and its portfolio of solutions. It’s truly been the ideal partnership.”

Boston-based New Heritage invests from $15 million to $40 million of minority or majority equity in companies with $4 million to $20 million of EBITDA. Sectors of interest include business services, healthcare, and manufacturing. In December 2023, New Heritage held an above target and oversubscribed closing of its fourth fund, New Heritage Capital IV LP, with $438 million in capital.

Shamrock Capital has $1.9 billion of assets under management and invests from $15 million to $100 million of control or minority equity in growth capital and buyouts. Sectors of interest include media, entertainment, communications, and intellectual property. In July 2020, the firm held a final close of Shamrock Capital Content Fund II LP with $400 million of capital. The firm was founded in 1978 as the Roy E. Disney family investment company and is headquartered in Los Angeles.

R.W. Baird was the financial advisor to Carnegie Dartlet and Heritage on this transaction.

© 2024 Private Equity Professional | February 16, 2024

Filed Under: Exit, Transactions

GreyLion Continues Build of ADC Aerospace

February 15, 2024 by John McNulty

ADC Aerospace, a portfolio company of GreyLion, has acquired Cast-Rite Corporation.

Cast-Rite Corporation (CRC) is a provider of zinc and aluminum alloy die casting and fabrication services including engineering and tooling. Customers of CDC are active in the aerospace, industrial machinery, and defense sectors.

Source: Cast-Rite

The company operates 14 cold-chamber, die-casting machines for aluminum parts, and 4 hot-chamber die-casting machines for zinc parts at its headquarters near Los Angeles in Gardena, California.

ADC Aerospace is a California-based provider of sand and investment casting, machining, robotic finishing, and assembly services for mid- to low-volume high-complexity components used in the aerospace, defense, medical, automotive, and industrial sectors. ADC has expertise with aluminum, zinc, stainless steel, brass, and Inconel (a nickel-chromium-based alloy).

ADC, led by CEO John Schaefer, operates a 115,000 square foot facility near Los Angeles in Buena Park, California. The company operates 25 high-pressure, die-casting machines, over 50 CNC milling and turning centers. Other capabilities include coating, anodizing, plating, painting, powder coating, assembly and testing. Customers of ADC include Raytheon Technologies, Honeywell, Safran, TransDigm Group, Heico, L3Harris, and Parker-Meggitt.

Source: ADC Aerospace

“We are excited about the opportunity to combine Cast-Rite’s business with our existing capable and scalable platform, ADC Aerospace,” said Mr. Schaefer. “While the manufacturing capabilities between our businesses are very similar, this acquisition provides a unique strategic opportunity and substantial acceleration of our growth plans. Over the next four months, we plan to transition the Cast-Rite business into our ADC Buena Park facilities and have an experienced project team in place to accomplish this goal.”

GreyLion acquired ADC Aerospace (then Alloy Die Casting) from Gladstone Investment Corporation in August 2019.

“John and the entire ADC team have done a terrific job of successfully executing against the company’s strategic business objectives and ensuring that ADC continues to be a leading manufacturer of complex, highly engineered turnkey die-cast parts used in critical applications throughout the aerospace, defense, medical, automotive and specialty industrial markets,” said David Ferguson, a managing partner at GreyLion. “The buy of Cast-Rite will enable the company to enhance the depth and breadth of the solutions it provides its customers and will further position ADC for continued success over the long-term.”

New York City-based GreyLion makes both minority and control investments of $25 million to $125 million in lower middle-market companies that are active in the consumer, industrial, software and services sectors. GreyLion was formed in June 2020 when PWP Growth Equity spun out from Perella Weinberg.

© 2024 Private Equity Professional | February 16, 2024

Filed Under: Add-on, Transactions

Lincoln Private Market Index Closes 2023 at a Record High

February 15, 2024 by John McNulty

The Lincoln Private Market Index (LPMI), which tracks changes in the enterprise value of US privately held companies, increased by 0.6% during the fourth quarter of 2023, resulting in the index ending 2023 at another record high.

According to Chicago-headquartered investment bank Lincoln International, the LPMI’s increase was directionally in line with the movement of the S&P 500, which increased 9.1% since the third quarter. During 2023, the S&P 500 soared by 22.7%, while the LPMI climbed only 5.5% but demonstrated greater stability over the year. The public index was buoyed by multiple expansion in its seven largest companies whereas the engine behind the LPMI’s growth was strong operating performance, as multiples declined for the third consecutive quarter.

“Revenue growth has declined, but interestingly EBITDA growth has been strong as businesses took measures to protect and even grow their profitability.”

While publicly traded companies, which generally have lower leverage than private companies, have benefitted from multiple expansion, private equity-owned business valuations continue to face downward pressure from high-interest rates as investors attempt to offset elevated acquisition financing costs against sustainable leverage and internal return hurdles. The average EBITDA multiple of new buyout transactions that closed in the second half of 2023 was 11.8x (for transactions tracked in Lincoln International’s proprietary private market database), which remains a far cry from the peak average multiple of 13.4x which occurred in Q4 2021.

Leveraged buyout volumes in 2023 were depressed as sellers and buyers remained locked in a tug-of-war. Sellers remain reluctant to part with their investments at lower valuations than those seen at the height of the market in 2021 and early 2022, and buyers have held out for investment opportunities that reconcile their return requirements with the burden of high financing costs. In the absence of larger platform acquisitions, dealmakers are instead focusing their efforts on add-on acquisitions, which represented 35% of all transactions observed by Lincoln in the second half of 2023, an increase from 21% at the end of 2021.

While Revenue Growth Moderated, EBITDA Growth Persevered
For the fourth consecutive quarter, revenue growth declined slightly for private companies tracked in Lincoln’s database, although roughly 70% of all companies experienced revenue growth, approximating the three-year trailing average. Margins, however, have held up despite pressure on the top line. EBITDA growth for the same group was 4.8% year-over-year in the fourth quarter, compared to 4.2% in the third quarter. While revenue growth in the aggregate has slowed, portfolio companies are stemming the tide by cutting costs and focusing on strengthening profitability. In the fourth quarter, revenue growth exceeded EBITDA growth by 3.0%, the slimmest gap since 2021, as companies found creative ways to keep EBITDA afloat while addressing contracting demand.

“Revenue growth has declined, but interestingly EBITDA growth has been strong as businesses took measures to protect and even grow their profitability,” said Steve Kaplan, a professor at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, who assists and advises Lincoln International on the LPMI. “Businesses were able to stave off numerous headwinds since the beginning of 2023, and the resiliency they exhibited is evidenced by the LPMI’s growth despite multiple contraction in the private markets.”

Competition in Private Credit Kicks Up
The Lincoln Senior Debt Index (LSDI) ended the year flat from the third quarter at an average fair value of 97.9% and was modestly elevated from 96.3% at the end of 2022. Interestingly the index’s stable median loan-to-value (LTV) of approximately 40% since 2021 contrasted with the index’s increase in yield from 8.0% to 11.4% over the same period, which might suggest lenders are getting a higher return for the same level of risk thanks to rising reference rates. Investors, however, are taking these higher returns with a grain of salt as they attempt to balance higher returns with slimmer-than-ever portfolio company fixed charge coverage. At the end of 2023, the constituent population’s weighted-average fixed charge coverage ratio was 1.07x, which has crumbled from 1.57x at the end of 2021.

Between the third and the fourth quarter, Lincoln observed approximately 25 basis points of tightening in unitranche credit facilities, while competition also manifested itself through tighter original issue discount requirements and looser covenants. Whereas in the third quarter, spread tightening was mostly observed for transactions involving businesses with greater than $40 million of EBITDA, tighter spreads seeped into transactions for smaller businesses in the fourth quarter. As the broadly syndicated loan (BSL) market, which generally offers lower-yielding loans than private credit, starts to open, stiff competition has surfaced as larger lenders are forced to hunt for smaller, higher-yielding credits to deploy capital.

“Competition has increased, and lenders are being forced to sharpen their pencils,” said Ron Kahn, a managing director and co-head of Lincoln’s valuations and opinions group. “But with so few high-quality assets and the re-opening of the BSL market, where lenders deploy the plethora of capital they have at their disposal remains the biggest challenge.”

“While default rates remain relatively low at 3.4%, fixed charge coverage remains slim and there is an expectation for more defaults and stress on the system,” continued Mr. Kahn. “To properly assess where the credit markets are today, you need to look at fixed charge coverage relative to LTV and returns.”

While cash flow and cash interest remain paramount, borrowers and lenders agreed to forego cash interest in lieu of paid-in-kind (PIK) interest at a higher clip in the fourth quarter, as approximately 10% of new private credit issuances in 2023 included a PIK component, nearly doubled from the end of 2021.

PIK interest can often have a negative connotation and is sometimes viewed as indicative of borrowers being unable to service cash interest; however, the reasons for using PIK interest are more nuanced. Lenders are now offering PIK interest as a competitive edge in the pricing process, emblematic of broader pricing competition in the market.

Incremental Facility Pricing Tightens in the Fourth Quarter
Private lenders thrive on a strong LBO market, and the decline in buyout volume has hampered private credit to an extent, but add-on acquisitions have remained robust. As incumbent lenders offer financing for these add-ons, market competition is beginning to manifest itself as incremental facilities are issued at lower pricing, deeper in the capital structure. In the fourth quarter, Lincoln observed an increase in incremental senior and unitranche issuances to existing structures, and pricing was approximately 50 bps lower than the existing facility, on average.

Investors Eye Prospective Deal Resurgence in Second Half of 2024
The prospect of higher levels of mergers and acquisitions activity in 2024 may hinge upon the future of interest rates. Managing debt service costs while investing in future growth has been top of mind for portfolio companies and will continue to be a focal point for businesses in 2024 as rates remain elevated. The recent hint of rate cuts indicates that lower cost of debt could be on the horizon, but lenders remain skeptical that the downward-sloping yield curve declines observed in 2023 will be realized. Underwriting professionals have not been considering expected declines in the curve and have continued to assume higher interest rates in their models.

“With performance holding up, the biggest hurdle to surmount in 2024 for ramped-up dealmaking will be the alignment of buyer and seller expectations.” 

Based on a recent survey of more than 100 private market professionals conducted by Lincoln International, over 84% of survey respondents are anticipating transaction volume to tick up by the end of 2024, with more than half indicating a realignment between buyer and seller valuation expectations will drive deal flow. Conversely, 78% of respondents believed that covenant default rates would increase in 2024. While lenders, sponsors and businesses will need to grapple with more adversity, many left 2023 with newfound optimism.

“Amidst a sluggish deal environment in 2023, private companies demonstrated resiliency,” concluded Mr. Kahn. “With performance holding up, the biggest hurdle to surmount in 2024 for ramped-up dealmaking will be the alignment of buyer and seller expectations. Limited partners expect a return on their capital, and general partners need to deploy capital.”

Lincoln International provides mergers and acquisitions advisory, private funds and capital markets advisory, and valuations and fairness opinions. The firm is headquartered in Chicago and has more than 20 offices in 15 countries.

Follow this LINK to see the full Q4 2023 Lincoln Private Market Index report.

© 2024 Private Equity Professional | February 16, 2024

Filed Under: News, Studies

Lucky Number Seven. Trinity Hunt Hits Hard Cap on New Fund

February 15, 2024 by John McNulty

Trinity Hunt Partners, after five months of fundraising, has held an oversubscribed closing of Trinity Hunt Partners VII LP at its hard cap with $700 million of capital commitments.

Dallas-based Trinity Hunt invests from $15 million to $70 million of equity in founder and family-owned companies that have revenues of at least $10 million and EBITDA of least $2 million. Sectors of interest include business services, healthcare services, and consumer services. No Fund VII portfolio companies have been acquired yet.

Fund VII ‘s limited partners include insurance companies, pension funds, endowments, foundations, consultants, funds of funds, and family offices.

“Our team is humbled by the enthusiastic support for Fund VII by our investors, particularly in the midst of a challenging fundraising environment industry wide. It’s a testament to the hard work and ingenuity of our team,” said Blake Apel, the managing partner at Trinity Hunt. “We are excited to continue to deploy our time-tested investment strategy, with the aim of providing the highest quality talent and capital solutions needed to significantly enhance the growth of small-cap services companies.”

In recent years Trinity Hunt has grown both in terms of assets under management as well as the size of its team, which has more than doubled over the last two years to over 40 professionals. The firm has also increased its investment activity, completing more than 30 transactions in 2023, including 5 platforms and over 25 add-on acquisitions.

Trinity Hunt’s sixth fund closed at its hard cap in September 2021 with an oversubscribed $460 million of capital commitments, and its fifth fund closed at its hard cap of $350 million in October 2018.

Trinity Hunt used Aviditi Advisors as its placement agent and Kirkland & Ellis provided legal services.

© 2024 Private Equity Professional | February 16, 2024

Filed Under: New Funds, News

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