The Economics of the Private Equity Market
The Swedish Institute of Financial Research (SIFR) is pleased to invite interested academics and practitioners to a Conference on 鈥淭he Economics of the Private Equity Market鈥 on August 30 and 31, 2007, in 海角社区下载.

This conference is motivated by the unprecedented activity in private equity in the last few years. 2006 has seen records set for the amounts of aggregate fundraising and investment activity, as well as for the size of the individual funds raised and individual buyout transactions undertaken. These investments are having a profound effect in spurring entrepreneurship and restructuring in many industries worldwide. At the same time, the rapid growth and globalization of the industry has worried policy makers and raised demands for increased regulation and disclosure of this sector. Still, public debate has largely ignored the significant amount of academic research evidence that does exist on private equity funds and their impact on the economy. The purpose of this conference is to bring this body of research to the attention of policy makers and practitioners, and to showcase the academic research frontier in private equity.
The first conference day aims to bring together leading academics with financial practitioners and policymakers to discuss recent research on private equity and its broader implications for practice and policy. There will be keynote presentations by leading scholars in the field, which will be followed by a panel discussion where practitioners get to express their views on these issues. The keynote speakers include Tim Jenkinson (Oxford), Michael Jensen (Harvard), Steve Kaplan (Chicago), and Josh Lerner (Harvard). The second conference day has a standard academic format, and aims to provide an academic forum showcasing the frontier in private equity research. Attached are the bios of the keynote speakers as well as a conference program.
Open Conference Program, Thursday, August 30
08:30 Coffee and welcome.
09:00鈥12:30 Presentation: Steven Kaplan, University of Chicago: 鈥淧rivate Equity: Fiction, Fact, Future鈥.
Presentation: Josh Lerner , Harvard University: 鈥淭he institutionalization of Private Equity: How will the industry evolve going forward?鈥.
Coffee.
Presentation: Tim Jenkinson, Oxford University: 鈥淗ow is private equity changing public equity markets?鈥
12:30鈥13:30 Lunch
13:30鈥17:00 Presentation: Michael Jensen, Harvard University: 鈥淭he Economic Case for Private Equity (and Some Disturbing Trends)鈥.
Coffee
Panel Discussion: The future of private equity?
Panelists: Peter Cornelius, Alpinvest
Michael Jensen, Harvard
Casper von Koskull, Goldman Sachs
Bj枚rn Sav茅n, Industri Kapital
Gabriel Urwitz, Segulah.
Moderator: Per Str枚mberg, SIFR.
17:00 Concluding remarks.
Academic Conference Program, Friday, August 31
08:30 Coffee.
09:00鈥09:45 Presentation: 鈥滵o Buyouts (Still) Create Value?鈥
Presenter: Edie Hotchkiss, Weihong Song, University of Cincinnati
Discussant: Francesca Cornelli, London Business School
09:45鈥10:30 Presentation: 鈥淭he financing of large buyouts: Capital structure and deal pricing鈥
Presenter: Mike Weisbach, University of Illinois
Discussant: Viral Acharya, London Business School
10:30鈥11:00 Coffee
11:00鈥11:45 Presentation: 鈥淔inancial leverage and bargaining power with suppliers: Evidence from leveraged buyouts.鈥
Presenter: Ted Fee, Michigan State
Discussant: Henrik Cronquist, Ohio State University
11:45鈥12:30 Presentation: 鈥漈he performance of reverse leveraged buyouts.鈥
Presenter: Josh Lerner, Harvard University
Discussant: Michael Weisbach, University of Illinois
12:30鈥13:30 Lunch.
13:30鈥14:15 Presentation: 鈥淢easuring the risk of private equity funds: A new approach.鈥
Presenter: Ludovic Phalippou, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Tarun Ramadorai, Oxford University
14:15鈥15:00 Presentation: 鈥淓conomics of Private equity funds鈥.
Presenter: Ayako Yasuda, Wharton
Discussant: Chester Spatt, Carnegie Mellon University
15:00鈥15:15 Coffee
15:15鈥16:00 Presentation: 鈥淲hich CEO characteristics and abilities matter?鈥.
Presenter: Morten S酶rensen, University of Chicago
Discussant: David Yermack, New York University
16:00 Closing of conference.