Leveraged buyout
A leveraged buyout (LBO) is the purchase of a company financed mostly with borrowed money secured on the target's own cash flows, so a small equity investment can control the whole firm.
See it move
A sponsor buys a company for €100,000,000, funded with €30,000,000 of equity and €70,000,000 of debt. Over five years, €20,000,000 of debt is repaid from the company's own cash flow, leaving €50,000,000 of debt at exit. Sold at the same €100,000,000 enterprise value, exit equity is €50,000,000 — a 1.67x multiple on the €30,000,000 invested.
The formula
Variables
- Exit equity value (€)
- Exit enterprise value (€)
- Debt outstanding at exit (€)
Converts the total business value at exit into the value that belongs to the equity holder, after remaining debt is repaid.
Variables
- Equity multiple (multiple of invested capital) (x)
- Exit equity value (€)
- Entry equity investment (€)
Measures how many times over the sponsor's original equity investment is returned at exit.