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KKR in 2004: Looking for the Second Act |
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ExcerptsBackground NoteThree Bear Stearns veterans, Kohlberg, Kravis and Roberts, started KKR in 1976. The firm's rise on Wall Street was meteoric. By the 1990s, the businesses that KKR controlled would have placed it amongst the top ten US corporations, had it been an industrial company. The firm had mobilized more funds than the GNP of many small countries put together. Meanwhile, Roberts befriended Kohlberg, who had graduated from Harvard Business School and later become the head of Bear Stearns' corporate finance department... Recent DevelopmentsPerformance of LBO funds declined from an annualized return of 35% in 1989 to 20% in the first quarter of 2000. In the same period, venture-capital returns soared to over 50% from 5% . Soon investors became skeptical about investing in LBO funds. Two prominent examples were Oregon Investment Council (OIC) and Washington State Investment Board (WSIB), agencies responsible for investing the retirement assets of state teachers and public employees, which had been the foremost investors in KKR's takeover ventures during the period 1986 to 2002. The Oregon Treasury had committed $2.34 billion of retirees' pension money in various KKR takeovers. By and large, the pension fund had been handsomely rewarded...
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