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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Private Equity Limited Partnership Agreement Release: The Industry’s Snowden Moment
from Naked Capitalism:
The Private Equity Limited Partnership Agreement Release: The Industrys Snowden Moment
Posted on May 29, 2014 by Yves Smith
Last week, the Wall Street Journal released an important story that chronicled how the private equity industry kingpin KKR systematically took advantage of its credulous investors via taking questionable charges through its related company KKR Capstone. That story depended critically on the Wall Street Journal obtaining the terms of the investment from a 2006 KKR limited partnership agreement so that it could ascertain whether the investors had authorized these charges. Readers may recall that the private industry heretofore has kept these contracts under lock and key, insisting zealously that they be kept in the strictest confidence possible by those who obtain access to them.
Weve published 12 private equity limited partnership agreements (LPAs), including the KKR limited partnership agreement that key to the Wall Street Journals story, in a searchable format that you can view here and here. We obtained the documents through the Pennsylvania Treasurys public e-contracts library. Until now, it appears virtually no one knew that they had been made public. And you can be sure that if anyone associated with the private equity industry had recognized what had occurred, they would have shut this window immediately.
It is hard to overstate the significance of Pennsylvanias release of these private equity limited partnership agreements. This development will change the industry forever. Even a superficial reading of these documents shows that investors and policy-makers were naive to treat private equity general partners as deserving of the blind trust they had placed in them.
Trade Secret? What Trade Secret?
For decades, private equity (PE) firms have asserted that limited partnership agreements (LPAs), the contracts between themselves and investors, should be treated in their entirety as trade secrets, and therefore not subject to disclosure under Freedom of Information Act laws in any jurisdiction. These private equity general partners argued that the information in their contracts was so sensitive that it needed to be shielded from competitors eyes, otherwise their unique, critically important know-how would be appropriated and used against them. In particular, PE firms have made frequent, forceful claims that their limited partnership agreements provide valuable insight into their investment strategies. The industry took the position that these documents were as valuable to them as the formula for Coca-Cola or the schematics for Intels next microprocessor chip. ..............(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2014/05/private-equity-limited-partnership-agreement-release-industrys-snowden-moment.html
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The Private Equity Limited Partnership Agreement Release: The Industry’s Snowden Moment (Original Post)
marmar
May 2014
OP
drm604
(16,230 posts)1. These people are ripping off pension funds!
I hope that this gets wide coverage. The scam may be a little esoteric for the typical person to follow, but the idea that they're ripping off pension funds is easy enough to grasp.