XM无法为美国居民提供服务。

Ares Management leads private credit drive in Italy



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>CORRECTED-Ares Management leads private credit drive in Italy</title></head><body>

Corrects headline to private 'credit' not 'equity'

Small Italy firms offer opportunities to private equity

Some mid-market private equity firms opening offices in Milan

Private credit funds moving in to finance buyouts

Direct lending market growth faces constraints - Deloitte

By Valentina Za

MILAN, Aug 5 (Reuters) -Global private credit firms, including industry leader Ares Management, are increasingly focused on Italy as more small businesses which are the backbone of its economy open up to outside investors, providing buyout deal opportunities.

With 140 direct lending deals completed over the past 45 quarters, Italy accounts for just 4.3% of continental Europe's overall transactions, Deloitte Analysis said.

But increasing competition in the sector across Europe, where traditional banks are reclaiming a slice of the syndicated loan market and pressuring returns, heightens the appeal of new growth areas, Deloitte data showed.

"Italy is the new frontier for direct lenders due to its growing relevance for private equity firms active in the mid-market," Tyrone Cooney, a partner at Ares Management Credit Group in charge of France and southern Europe, told Reuters.

Ares, which manages $428 billion in assets globally, has completed three Italian deals with an investment size of between 50 million and 150 million euros ($55-$165 million) in recent months.

"While competition in the Italian market is increasing, Italy is not as competitive as the UK, France and Benelux."

The $1.7 trillion private credit sector is more developed in the United States than in Europe, where the International Monetary Fund however recorded 17% annual growth over the past five years.

Direct lenders traditionally focus on middle-market firms, which are too small to sell public debt and require financing that is too large for a single bank.

Italy's industrial north is home to hundreds of family-owned companies that compete globally despite their small size, which in recent years have increasingly been opening up to private equity firms as owners age.

Industry association AIFI recorded 224 private equity investments in Italian family-owned firms in 2022, versus 151 four years earlier.

"We've been working with several new entrants into the Italian market," Cooney said, adding newcomers were mid-market private equity funds Ares had previously teamed up with in the Netherlands, France, Britain and Scandinavia.

MILAN OFFICES

Some pan-European investment firms looking to expand into Italy set up local offices.

France's Montefiore Investment opened a Milan office in September 2022, followed by the acquisition of a majority stake in luxury retail general contractor EXA in 2023, its first Italian deal.

A&M Capital Europe, a London-based middle-market private equity fund, plans to open a Milan office early next year.

Francesco Di Trapani, a senior adviser at private credit manager Pemberton who focuses on Italy and Spain as head of southern Europe, said the growing private equity interest meant more business for direct lenders in Italy.

Advisory firm Deloitte expects the proportion of Italian private equity deals financed by credit funds to rise to 15.8% of the total in the second half, up from 10.5% in the first and 8.6% last year.

London-based Pemberton arranged three deals in Italy this year, including fund Ambienta's buyout of engineering group Officine Maccaferri, where banks JPMorgan, Intesa Sanpaolo and UniCredit which provided shorter-dated financing, covered 40% of the total financing.

Italy typically offers between five and 10 deals above the 100 million euro threshold targeted by Pemberton, and Di Trapani said that, given the number of competitors in that size range, each fund got two or three deals a year.

"The expectation is that the total could rise to 15-20 per year, attracting new entrants," he said, adding Italy's stable political situation helped.

However, Italy's credit market faces hurdles due to lack of investors for domestic players which could be active alongside heavyweights such as Ares, Claudio Scardovi, a Deloitte partner in Milan said.

Large industry players, capable of attracting international investors, typically target deals with financing of at least 50 million euros. Italy's average deal size is of just a few million euros, and would suit small domestic direct lenders.

"They proliferate, but often struggle in their fundraising because of their single-country focus and below-scale size," Scardovi said.


($1 = 0.9102 euros)


IMF private credit https://tmsnrt.rs/4fKW9lJ

Deloitte Analysis PC deals https://tmsnrt.rs/4ceHM5S


Reporting by Valentina Za; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise

</body></html>

免责声明: XM Group仅提供在线交易平台的执行服务和访问权限,并允许个人查看和/或使用网站或网站所提供的内容,但无意进行任何更改或扩展,也不会更改或扩展其服务和访问权限。所有访问和使用权限,将受下列条款与条例约束:(i) 条款与条例;(ii) 风险提示;以及(iii) 完整免责声明。请注意,网站所提供的所有讯息,仅限一般资讯用途。此外,XM所有在线交易平台的内容并不构成,也不能被用于任何未经授权的金融市场交易邀约和/或邀请。金融市场交易对于您的投资资本含有重大风险。

所有在线交易平台所发布的资料,仅适用于教育/资讯类用途,不包含也不应被视为用于金融、投资税或交易相关咨询和建议,或是交易价格纪录,或是任何金融商品或非应邀途径的金融相关优惠的交易邀约或邀请。

本网站上由XM和第三方供应商所提供的所有内容,包括意见、新闻、研究、分析、价格、其他资讯和第三方网站链接,皆保持不变,并作为一般市场评论所提供,而非投资性建议。所有在线交易平台所发布的资料,仅适用于教育/资讯类用途,不包含也不应被视为适用于金融、投资税或交易相关咨询和建议,或是交易价格纪录,或是任何金融商品或非应邀途径的金融相关优惠的交易邀约或邀请。请确保您已阅读并完全理解,XM非独立投资研究提示和风险提示相关资讯,更多详情请点击 这里

风险提示: 您的资金存在风险。杠杆商品并不适合所有客户。请详细阅读我们的风险声明