> the PE firm is starting a 5-10 year project to strip mine the company for all it's worth and leaving a husk of a company that's loaded with the debt that was used to acquire it and no real assets
Long-term default rates for private-equity targets are low across markets [1]. Banks and leveraged-loan lenders tend to get paid back.
Also, most targets that later go public have low enough leverage to be able to immediately pay dividends [2]. You just don’t tend to hear about the specialty farm equipment maker IPO in most circles.
> that's a harder argument when squarespace doesn't seem to be particularly struggling
They’re turning hundreds of millions of dollars of revenue into hundreds of thousands of profits by spending hundreds of millions on sales and marketing.
Long-term default rates for private-equity targets are low across markets [1]. Banks and leveraged-loan lenders tend to get paid back.
Also, most targets that later go public have low enough leverage to be able to immediately pay dividends [2]. You just don’t tend to hear about the specialty farm equipment maker IPO in most circles.
> that's a harder argument when squarespace doesn't seem to be particularly struggling
They’re turning hundreds of millions of dollars of revenue into hundreds of thousands of profits by spending hundreds of millions on sales and marketing.
[1] https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/154670852.pdf
[2] https://www.darden.virginia.edu/sites/default/files/inline-f...