Kelso & Company

Kelso & Company is a private equity investment firm focusing on leveraged buyouts, recapitalizations and growth capital transactions. Kelso invests in a variety of sectors, including communication, manufacturing and restaurants. Kelso is based in New York City.

Kelso & Company
Private Ownership
IndustryPrivate Equity
Founded1971 (1971)
HeadquartersNew York City, New York, United States
Key people
Phil Berney (co-CEO)
Frank Loverro (co-CEO)
Frank Nickell (chairman)
ProductsPrivate equity funds, Leveraged buyouts, Recapitalizations, Growth capital
Total assets$11.2 billion
Websitewww.kelso.com

Kelso also provides mezzanine capital through a joint venture with asset management firm BlackRock. Their joint venture, BlackRock Kelso Capital Corp. (NASDAQ: BKCC), is organized as a type of publicly traded private equity company known as a Business Development Company.

History

Founded in 1971 as Kelso Bangert & Company, the firm acted as both an advisor and merchant bank, both making investments and advising in mergers and acquisitions. Kelso was founded by Louis O. Kelso, a lawyer and economist who is given credit for developing the concept for employee stock ownership plans, in 1956. Kelso, alongside a sister company Louis O. Kelso Inc., focused initially on M&A activity involving Employee Stock Ownership Plans.[1]

Kelso raised its first private equity fund and has had a dedicated private equity investment platform since 1980. Louis O. Kelso who died in 1991 transitioned management of the firm to Joseph Schuchert to focus on writing and lecturing.[1][2] Today the firm is headed by Frank T. Nickell who joined the firm in 1977.

In June 2016, Kelso closed its latest fund at $2.6 billion.[3]

Investments

Since 1980, the firm has raised approximately $10.1 billion of investor commitments to its private equity funds and was among the 50 largest private equity firms globally. Since its inception, the firm has made investments in over 90 companies representing more than $31 billion of aggregate purchase price.

Kelso & Company has invested in energy, materials, retailing, industrial and consumer products, telecommunication services, financial services, and healthcare sectors.[4] The company typically invests in North America with a focus on the United States. It targets investing between $50 million and $600 million in firms that have a value of between $250 million and $2.5 billion.[4]

gollark: They generally have perfectly good fans.
gollark: Personally, I also don't really trust "cloud" stuff with all my datas.
gollark: Generally it's actually not cheaper to use "cloud" stuff if you plan to use it *constantly*.
gollark: The biggest issue is that I would need to cross-compile everything to ARM.
gollark: My server stuff probably *could* mostly run off a raspberry pi, but those have downsides and when I occasionally do want to do heavy computing it would be VERY IRRITATING.

References

  1. "Louis O. Kelso, Who Advocated Worker-Capitalism, Is Dead at 77." New York Times, February 21, 1991.
  2. "Standard Endorses Kelso Bid." New York Times, March 18, 1988.
  3. Damyanova, Vanya. "Kelso & Co closed Fund IX above target at $2.6bn - AltAssets Private Equity News". www.altassets.net.
  4. "Kelso & Company: Private Company Information - Businessweek". www.bloomberg.com. Retrieved 2016-06-14.
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