Q&A: Private Equity, Assest Management and Investment Banking?

Question by Confused: Private Equity, Assest Management and Investment Banking?
I feel i get the gist of how these three differ. But I’m not entirely sure. Could someone define and describe these please?

Best answer:

Answer by FatHalo
PE’s are private companies (not listed on exchanges) who usually take over all or part of other businesses equity (and voting voices) in order to take control the management using different types of strategies (LBO’s, Venture Capital, Growth capital, Distressed, Mezzanine …) PE’s invest their money into companies in order to take them over, influence their management and/or finance a capital-strapped company on advantageous terms all in the objective of benefiting from long term return on equity.

Asset management firms are rather intermediaries who advise and invest in and manage funds on behalf of their clients. These firms apply ” financial analysis, asset selection, stock selection, plan implementation and ongoing monitoring” in order to provide portfolios that fits the needs, objectives and risk tolerance of their clients and reach the optimal return for the given risk. They are not behind a specific stock, company, bond or any other asset class (that might include PE), they just manage the allocation of funds among these.

Investment banking is a little bit fuzzy word, but in its strict meaning, it refers to firms that help in the securitization, security issuance (equity or bonds), IPO’s, mergers and acquisitions, underwriting, … So, investment banks do not actually own the shares they help issue in case of an IPO (well sometimes they do) but it is only with the intention of selling them on the secondary market, with hopefully high enough spreads.

So few criteria to distinguish between the 3 if you will is the level of ownership of assets, degree of involvement and holding horizon. I would rank the 3 companies from ‘high’ on all these 3 criteria (PE) to ‘low’ (IB). PE’s make big and long term commitments by taking over a majority or minority parts of a company (think about Cerberus in GMAC) in order to either influence its management or take advantage of a long-term capital need. Asset managements only construct portfolios of different assets on behalf of their clients and do not own these assets themselves (If one asset loses value, only investors holding that specific asset lose money, the AM company itself do not incure any loss, whereas for an PE, if a company make a loss, the loss is reflected in the value of PE and all investors in PE take that loss). IBs theoretically do not get involved in the asset price or value beyond their function as advisors and underwritters (well they could lose money in some cases)

Add your own answer in the comments!

Can someone explain Wall Street, market capitalization, company equity, *stock exchange & more?

Question by KAI: Can someone explain Wall Street, market capitalization, company equity, *stock exchange & more?
I’m really stupid, and would like to know.

10 POINTS AND APPRECIATION FOR THE PERSON WITH THE BEST ANSWER!
was unsure of what section to put this in, sorry.

Best answer:

Answer by juicebox
wall street: a financial district in New York, home of various stock exchanges, like the New York Stock Exchange. It’s essentially the financial center of the world.
Market Capitalization: the number of shares a company has multiplied by their market price. So if a company had 1,000,000 shares at 5$ each, it’s market capitalization would be $ 5,000,000. A share is basically a security that represents ownership in a company.
Company Equity: the assets of a company minus its liabilities. Assets are anything that generate revenue for a firm or increase its value, like plant equipment, cash, inventory, and accounts receivable (accounts receivable is very simply “money owed to a company by its debtors”. An example would be when you purchase a car. You don’t normally pay the whole thing up front; you enter a plan where you make monthly payments to pay it off). Liabilities are financial obligations a company has. So this means, in the future they will have to spend revenue to meet those obligations. An example would be a company that has financed itself through bonds which are debt instruments.
Stock Exchange: a stock exchange is the market for securities and equity derivatives trading (the trading of company shares, equity derivates: search options and futures).
Search “equity financing investopedia” or “share investopedia” and there will be a more clear and comprehensive definition with articles that will give you a walk through. Investopedia is actually the best site for finance and economics; it has articles and definitions for introductory financial and economic concepts all the way up to the more complex ones like derivatives, securitization and hedging. Sorry if this wasn’t any help

Give your answer to this question below!