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According to Mikkel Svenstrup, chief investment officer at ATP, Denmark’s largest pension fund, the private equity industry is looking more like a pyramid scheme. Kaye Wiggins reports for the Financial Times:

A top executive at Denmarkโ€™s largest pension fund has compared the private equity industry to a pyramid scheme, warning buyout groups are increasingly selling companies to themselves and to peers on a scale that โ€œis not good businessโ€.

Mikkel Svenstrup, chief investment officer at ATP, said he was concerned because last year more than 80 per cent of the sales of portfolio companies by the private equity funds that ATP has invested in were either to another buyout group or were โ€œcontinuation fundโ€ deals, where a private equity group passes it between two different funds that it controls.

โ€œWeโ€™re a big fund investor, we have hundreds of funds and thousands of portfolio companies,โ€ he said. โ€œThis is not good business, right? This is the start of, potentially, Iโ€™m saying โ€˜potentiallyโ€™, a pyramid scheme. Everybodyโ€™s selling to each otherโ€‰.โ€‰.โ€‰.โ€‰Banks are lending against it. These are the concerns Iโ€™ve been sharing.โ€

ATP is a major investor in private equity funds. It has $119bn under management and has committed money to 147 buyout funds, according to PitchBook data.

Svenstrupโ€™s comments, made at the IPEM private equity conference in Cannes, are similar to those made by Amundi Asset Managementโ€™s chief investment officer Vincent Mortier in June. Mortier said some parts of the private equity industry โ€œlook like a pyramid scheme in a wayโ€.

Svenstrup said the โ€œexponential growthโ€ of the private equity industry in recent years, as investors have poured cash into its funds, would stop โ€œat some pointโ€, adding that this was โ€œjust a question of timeโ€.

โ€œItโ€™s not that I think the private equity market is going to drop off a cliff,โ€ Svenstrup said. โ€œWeโ€™re just going to be looking [at] potentially low returns and high costs.โ€ He added that the industry played an important role as โ€œa key driver of taking some companies from one step to the next and eventually hopefully getting IPOโ€™d or owned by some long-term ownersโ€.

ATP is cutting down on the number of private equity groups it commits money to, he told the conference.

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