Alt Investments
ESG Mindset Dominates Private Equity Sector

We talk to BDO about a survey it issued recently exploring how private equity limited partners – the investors – think about ESG factors. The survey briefly examines the position of family offices as competitors for deals.
A survey of 200 US private equity fund managers showing how ESG
investing dominates much thinking is not remotely surprising to a
senior figure at professional services firm BDO.
The firm’s latest survey shows that ESG is an even more dominant
concern for investment houses than it was in 2021. And in
other findings, it notes that family offices still trail
strategic investors and entities such as sovereign wealth funds
in competing for the most lucrative deals.
In 2021, BDO found that 94 per cent of private equity fund
managers said their limited partners “were clamoring for them to
incorporate environmental, social and governance investment
criteria into their investment strategies.”
This year, such limited partners say that ESG investments
are their top choice for where they plan to direct the most
capital, but ESG has emerged soundly as a core value that
underpins their broader fund strategies, including attracting and
retaining talent and helping to facilitate exits.
“ESG permeates into everything in the investment world now,” Mike
Campbell, tax office managing partner, Private Client Services at
BDO, told this news service in a recent call.
The report about private equity investor attitudes comes at a
time when wealth managers’ appetite for private markets is now
well known, almost a solid orthodoxy. There’s been a
shift toward private from public listed equity markets since
the end of the dotcom bubble in 2000. Privately held
investments and companies typically require less disclosure and
reporting to investors than is the case with companies listed on
the stock market. And that creates an ESG headache for
investors looking for clear, consistent data on how private firms
are managing decarbonization, protecting minorities or other
metrics.
Elsewhere in the report, half (50 per cent) of fund managers said
they would deploy the most capital to set up impact funds or
invest in targets with ESG-focused themes; 79 per cent said they
have raised an ESG or impact fund. However, just 12 per cent said
that they would deploy the most capital to new deals. Also,
77 per cent said that assets will price higher in the next six
months.
Competing for deals
In other findings, BDO found that more than half (53 per cent) of
fund managers said most of the competition for deals would come
from “strategic buyers” – entities willing to pay more for
acquisitions, as they target companies where they see potential
for immediate financial benefits. As far as family offices
are concerned, they bring up the rear in providing competition
for deals.
Campbell, when asked about how family offices’ financial muscle
stacks up, argued that FOs would maintain their strategy in
searching for deals.
“Family offices may be more selective and focused on their
investment strategies, as opposed to being in the market as much
as strategics, other private equity firms and sovereign wealth
funds right now,” he said.
One factor, noticed by this news service in the past, is that
family offices have had to
become more visible than in the past, partly to capture
attention of the hottest PE and venture capital investment firms,
and be invited to join in deals.
It appears that the private equity space hasn’t been able to
withstand the headwinds from a volatile global economy.
The BDO report said: “The deal-making environment continues to be
characterized by intense competition for limited quality assets.
Buyers have been finding themselves catering to high seller
expectations. Last spring, 91 per cent of fund managers said
asset prices would rise.”
“This spring, 76.5 per cent said the same. Showing that some
modulation has returned to the market, 16.5 per cent of
respondents said they expected asset prices to remain the same,
versus just 6 per cent who said the same a year ago.”