private equity
English
editNoun
editprivate equity (countable and uncountable, plural private equities)
- Capital stock in a private company that does not offer stock to the general public.
- An investment fund that specializes in buying companies in order to restructure and then sell them with a profit.
- Synonym: PE
- 2021 August 4, Jasper Jolly, “Spain’s La Liga agrees €2.7bn deal with private equity firm CVC”, in The Guardian[1]:
- Spain’s La Liga has agreed a €2.7bn (£2.3bn) deal with CVC that could see private equity involved in the running of a large European football league for the first time.
- 2022 February 15, Nina Lakhani, “Private equity’s dirty dozen: the 12 US firms funding dirty energy projects”, in The Guardian[2]:
- American private equity tycoons are profiteering from the global climate crisis by investing in fossil fuels that are driving greenhouse gas emissions, a new investigation reveals.
- 2022 July 7, “Private equity may be heading for a fall”, in The Economist[3], →ISSN:
- This was driven by a scramble for yield among pension funds, insurance companies and endowments during a decade of historically low interest rates in the aftermath of the global financial crisis of 2007-09. Many have more than doubled their allocations to private equity.
- 2024 March 18, Marc Hogan, “Same Old Song: Private Equity Is Destroying Our Music Ecosystem”, in The New York Times[4], →ISSN:
- Private equity — the industry responsible for bankrupting companies, slashing jobs and raising the mortality rates at the nursing homes it acquires — is making money by gobbling up the rights for old hits and pumping them back into our present.