Jeff Schwartz
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
That fund has performed very well.
We've made money.
Twelve or so investments have generated north of 30 percent gross and mid 20s net IRRs and have made some investments as distressed buyouts, some investments as secondary purchases of loans from from banks.
And we think that that marketplace is really ripe for continued investment activity.
And the fact that we have five, six years of investing experience in 10 plus companies and understanding this marketplace and developing a network of
restructuring advisors and restructuring attorneys gives us a real opportunity to identify some of these opportunities and then execute on these investments, which have a level of complexity to them that regular way loan refinancings or regular way buyouts don't have.
I think Ares at its heart is...
a great investment firm in understanding and appreciating and structuring risk versus reward.
And I think that's what we've become very good at as well.
We've taken that DNA forward and brought it down to a less sophisticated part of the market where some of those financial engineering tools are more differentiated even than they were at Aries back in the day.
But we recognize that the best way to make money for investors is not the straight down the middle of the fairway buyout that everybody else is competing
We look for transactions that have some complexity to them.
Our investments are generally structured where we feel like we can attach into a capital structure at a point with terms and protections and a rate that is a very attractive return profile with disproportionate upside versus downside risk.
It's a good question.
I think that the most important thing is delivering on what you say you are going to deliver on.
The advisors in the space, it's a small ecosystem of restructuring lawyers and advisors who participate in these situations.
People need to move fast.
Advisors need to pick capital providers who they know are going to deliver on what they put in a term sheet or what they put in an LOI.
And if you develop a reputation of being somebody who retrades at the 11th hour, you're not in the business for a very long time because nobody's going to take your LOIs or your indication seriously.
It's also important to deliver with capital on a timely basis.