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Private Equity investors wary of fraudulent financials

Private Equity investors wary of fraudulent financials thumbnail

Private equity investors in Asia are increasingly fearful of fraud within their portfolio companies as the global economic downturn puts mounting pressure on firms in the region.

The global financial crisis has already caused significant damage to private equity-backed companies in Asia, with shares plunging and demand drying up for everything from electronics to manufactured goods.

But corporate fraud, a scourge that can be more prevalent and harder to detect in emerging economies such as China and India, can quickly turn a bad private equity investment into a disaster.

The collapse of shares in India’s Satyam Computer Services last week after its chairman disclosed inflated earnings shocked shareholders and global markets, and served as a reminder of the pitfalls of investing in emerging markets. Private equity firms were believed by investment bankers and analysts to have been eyeing an investment in Satyam late last year.

“Satyam is a story about fraud, and that isn’t unique to emerging markets. What is unique to these markets is a generally accepted understanding that private equity firms here manage for a very different risk and reward equation,” said David Legg, managing director for Asia and Europe at Gerson Lehrman Group.

Gerson Lehrman provides research on deals to banks such as Credit Suisse, buyout firms and hedge funds.

“You can always use a second opinion from someone who has real expertise. Asia seems to have more examples of why that second opinion is so essential,” said Legg, whose firm’s Asia business grew 90 per cent during 2008.

In China, Beijing-based Asia Media Co was forced to delist in September from the Tokyo Stock Exchange after its founder and former top boss resigned, saying he had misallocated capital from the company.

Asia Media was one of the early bets in China by US venture capital fund Sequoia Capital, which helped the firm to become the first Chinese company to list in Tokyo. “The risk of fraud is higher in Asia,” said Jack Clode, managing director of Kroll Inc., a risk consulting company owned by Marsh & McLennan. “When the market is booming, clients don’t consider (fraud) as a serious issue,” he added.

Clode, based in Hong Kong, said Kroll’s post-transaction investigation business has grown 25 per cent in Asia since September, due in part to private equity-type investors fearful of what they may find.

Private equity firms from New York to London invested billions of dollars across Asia in the last few years in a rush to tap the region’s economic growth.



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