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Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Private Equity |
Founded | 1991[1] |
Headquarters | New York, New York |
Key people | Michael Psaros, David Shapiro, Raquel Palmer, Jay Bernstein |
Products | Leveraged buyout |
Total assets | $12 billion |
Website | www |
KPS Capital Partners is an Americaninvestment company that managesKPS Special Situation Funds, a family ofinvestment funds. KPS specifically invests out of two funds raised in October 2019: KPS Special Situations Fund V ($6.12 billion) and KPS Mid-Cap Fund ($1.02 billion).[2]
In June 2024, KPS Capital Partners ranked 50th inPrivate Equity International's PEI 300 ranking among the world's largest private equity firms.[3]
The company was founded in 1991 by Eugene Keilin, Michael Psaros, and David Shapiro, hence the KPS name.[4] KPS raised its first institutional fund in 1998.[5][6] On May 6, 2019, KPS Capital Partners signed an agreement withBrunswick Corporation to purchase itsfitness business valued at $490 million in an all cash transaction.[7] In 2020, KPS completed five platform investments, including IKG (January 2020),[8]Lufkin Industries (June 2020),[9]Briggs & Stratton (September 2020),[10]AM General (October 2020)[11] and Hussey Copper (December 2020).[12]In 2021, KPS announced the acquisition of the aluminum rolling business fromNorsk Hydro[13] and the EMEA food and consumer packaging business fromCrown Holdings.[14]
The firm is not a hedge fund, but focuses on making controlling equity investments in manufacturing and industrial companies. Many of its investments "involve creating new companies" that buy underperforming assets, such as "companies operating in bankruptcy or in default of obligations to creditors", or otherwise with a history of "recurring operating losses".[15] KPS is a global firm headquartered inNew York City with offices inFrankfurt andAmsterdam that invests in both North American and European-headquartered companies. The KPS Funds' portfolio companies currently have assets under management worth $12 billion, operate 158 manufacturing facilities in 22 countries, and have approximately 32,000 employees.[16][17] In 2019, KPS Fund V, the firm's active flagship fund, had $15 billion of investor demand for a $6 billion fund."[2][18]
TheFinancial Times noted that, while private equity firms often have a bad reputation for stripping assets and slashing jobs when buying distressed companies, KPS has established a reputation for constructive relationships with the workforce and their unions.[19] In 2009, Psaros estimated that he had saved about 20,000 jobs.[19] Unions also have appreciated that KPS uses little or no debt in its deals and have called in KPS to save companies.[19] KPS has worked with large manufacturing and industrial unions, having a "history of consulting workers" as noted by AFL-CIO. In Europe, KPS has established relationship and Framework Agreements with the German unions IG Metall and IG BCE.[20][21]
The following (incomplete) list includes major companies that are or had been controlled by KPS:[22]
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