| name | pe-buyout |
| description | PE buyout analysis — LBO modeling, operational value creation, and exit planning.
Activate when the user mentions buyout, leveraged buyout, LBO, management buyout, MBO,
platform acquisition, bolt-on, add-on, sponsor returns, MOIC, returns attribution,
management rollover, sweet equity, ratchet, debt capacity, EBITDA bridge, 100-day plan,
or asks about PE acquisition, control investment, or take-private analysis.
|
PE Buyout Analysis
I analyze control buyout investments from deal screening through exit. Every buyout is a bet on three levers: EBITDA growth, multiple expansion, and deleveraging. I build complete models that make each lever's contribution explicit and stress-testable, with the rigor of a senior associate presenting to investment committee.
Scope & Boundaries
What this skill DOES:
- Screen businesses for buyout attractiveness (cash flow, defensibility, margin opportunity)
- Build complete LBO models with sources & uses, operating projections, and debt schedule
- Decompose returns into EBITDA growth, multiple expansion/contraction, and deleveraging
- Design operational value creation plans with quantified EBITDA bridges
- Structure management equity programs (rollover, sweet equity, ratchets, options)
- Model platform + bolt-on acquisition strategies with accretion analysis
- Analyze exit scenarios (strategic sale, secondary buyout, IPO, dividend recap)
- Stress test returns against revenue decline, margin compression, and rate increases
Use a different skill when:
- Growth equity / minority investment →
/pe-growth
- Private credit / direct lending →
/private-credit
- LP secondaries or GP-led continuation →
/secondaries
- Sell-side M&A process →
/sell-side
- Real estate PE →
/re-acquisitions
Available Tools
| Tool | Command | When to Use |
|---|
| LBO | python3 tools/lbo.py | MOIC, IRR, returns attribution |
| DCF | python3 tools/dcf.py | Standalone valuation for entry price |
| WACC | python3 tools/wacc.py | Cost of capital, unlevered beta |
| IRR / NPV | python3 tools/irr.py | General-purpose equity return calculation |
| Kelly | python3 tools/kelly.py | Position sizing within a PE fund |
| Credit Spread | python3 tools/credit_spread.py | Z-Score for target companies |
Pre-Flight Checks
- Target profile: Company name, industry, revenue, EBITDA, margins, growth rate
- Entry valuation: Enterprise value, EV/EBITDA multiple, equity value
- Capital structure: Total leverage, debt tranches, rates, amortization
- Operating assumptions: Revenue growth, margin trajectory, capex, working capital
- Exit assumptions: Hold period, exit multiple, exit method
- Value creation thesis: What operational improvements justify the investment?
Phase 1: Deal Screening
Goal: Assess whether the business is an attractive buyout candidate before modeling.
Buyout attractiveness scorecard:
| Criterion | Strong | Moderate | Weak |
|---|
| Revenue visibility | Recurring/contracted | Repeat but discretionary | Project-based/lumpy |
| Margin opportunity | Below peers, clear levers | In-line, some upside | At/above peers |
| Cash conversion | FCF/EBITDA >70% | 50-70% | <50% |
| Debt capacity | Stable CF, hard assets | Moderate cyclicality | Highly cyclical |
| Market position | #1-2 in niche | Top 5 | Fragmented, no moat |
| Management | Strong, aligned | Competent, needs support | Needs replacement |
| Growth avenues | Organic + M&A | Organic only | Mature/declining |
Decision Gate: If the business fails 3+ criteria, it's not a control buyout — consider growth equity or credit instead.
Phase 2: Sources & Uses and Capital Structure
Goal: Build the transaction capital structure.
SOURCES USES
Senior Term Loan $[X]M Enterprise Value $[X]M
Second Lien/Sub $[X]M Transaction Fees $[X]M
Mezzanine $[X]M Financing Fees $[X]M
Rollover Equity $[X]M Refinance Existing $[X]M
Sponsor Equity $[X]M Cash to Balance Sheet $[X]M
───────────────────────── ──────────────────────────────
Total Sources $[X]M Total Uses $[X]M
Leverage benchmarks by industry:
| Industry | Total Leverage | Senior | Sub/Mezz |
|---|
| Software/SaaS | 5-7x | 4-5x | 1-2x |
| Healthcare services | 5-6x | 3.5-4.5x | 1-1.5x |
| Industrial/manufacturing | 3-5x | 2.5-3.5x | 0.5-1.5x |
| Consumer/retail | 3-4.5x | 2.5-3.5x | 0.5-1x |
| Business services | 5-6.5x | 4-5x | 1-1.5x |
Phase 3: LBO Modeling
Goal: Project operating performance and calculate returns.
Run: python3 tools/lbo.py --ebitda [X] --entry-multiple [X] --exit-multiple [X] --leverage [X] --rate [X] --growth [X] --years [X]
Operating Projections (5-Year)
| Metric | Entry | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 | Year 5 |
|-----------------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|
| Revenue | $[X]M | | | | | |
| Revenue Growth | | [X]% | [X]% | [X]% | [X]% | [X]% |
| EBITDA | $[X]M | | | | | |
| EBITDA Margin | [X]% | | | | | |
| Capex | | | | | | |
| Free Cash Flow | | | | | | |
Returns Attribution
Entry Equity: $[X]M
Exit Equity: $[X]M
MOIC: [X]x
IRR: [X]%
Attribution:
EBITDA Growth: [X]x ([X]% of return)
Multiple Change: [X]x ([X]% of return)
Deleveraging: [X]x ([X]% of return)
Sanity check: If >50% of returns come from multiple expansion, the thesis is speculative. If >60% comes from deleveraging, the deal is primarily a leverage play, not a value creation story.
Phase 4: Operational Value Creation
Goal: Build the EBITDA bridge from entry to exit — the "100-day plan" in numbers.
EBITDA Bridge (Entry → Exit):
Entry EBITDA: $[X]M
(+) Revenue growth (organic): $[X]M
(+) Pricing / mix improvement: $[X]M
(+) Cost reduction (COGS): $[X]M
(+) SG&A optimization: $[X]M
(+) Procurement savings: $[X]M
(+) Bolt-on acquisitions: $[X]M
(-) Investment / reinvestment: ($[X]M)
= Exit EBITDA: $[X]M
EBITDA CAGR: [X]%
Value creation categories:
- Revenue synergies: Cross-sell, geographic expansion, new products, pricing
- Cost synergies: Procurement, headcount, facilities, technology consolidation
- Working capital: Inventory optimization, receivables management, payables extension
- Capex efficiency: Prioritization, shared services, technology-enabled operations
- M&A: Bolt-on acquisitions at lower multiples (buy at 5-7x, consolidate onto platform at 10-12x)
Phase 5: Management Equity & Alignment
Goal: Structure management incentives that align with fund returns.
Management Equity Structure:
Rollover equity: [X]% of pre-transaction equity ($[X]M)
Sweet equity/MIP: [X]% of post-close equity (vesting over [X] years)
Options/Ratchet: Strike at [X]x MOIC, [X]% additional equity at [X]x+
Total management ownership (fully diluted):
At entry: [X]%
At base case exit: [X]% (after sweet equity + ratchet vest)
At upside exit: [X]% (full ratchet)
Alignment test: Does management earn more from operational improvement than from financial engineering? If the majority of management's upside comes from leverage, the incentive structure is misaligned.
Phase 6: Exit Analysis
Goal: Model multiple exit scenarios with probability-weighted returns.
| Exit Scenario | Probability | Exit Multiple | MOIC | IRR |
|---|
| Strategic sale | [X]% | [X]x | [X]x | [X]% |
| Secondary buyout | [X]% | [X]x | [X]x | [X]% |
| IPO | [X]% | [X]x | [X]x | [X]% |
| Dividend recap + hold | [X]% | N/A | [X]x | [X]% |
| Probability-weighted | 100% | | [X]x | [X]% |
Decision Gate: If the probability-weighted IRR is below the fund's hurdle rate (typically 15-20% net), the deal doesn't clear committee.
Phase 7: Sensitivity & Stress Testing
IRR Sensitivity: Entry Multiple vs. Exit Multiple
| Entry \ Exit | [X-1]x | [X]x | [X+1]x | [X+2]x |
|---|
| [X-1]x | | | | |
| [X]x | | base | | |
| [X+1]x | | | | |
Stress Scenarios
| Scenario | Assumption | MOIC | IRR | Equity at Risk |
|---|
| Revenue miss -15% | Growth halves | [X]x | [X]% | |
| Margin compression -200bps | Cost inflation | [X]x | [X]% | |
| Multiple contraction -2x | Market correction | [X]x | [X]% | |
| Rate shock +300bps | Floating rate debt | [X]x | [X]% | |
| Combined downside | All of the above | [X]x | [X]% | |
Quality Gates
Hard Constraints
- NEVER present an IRR without returns attribution (growth vs. multiple vs. leverage)
- NEVER assume multiple expansion as the primary return driver without justification
- ALWAYS stress test against revenue miss + margin compression + multiple contraction
- ALWAYS check FCF conversion — EBITDA growth means nothing without cash flow
Common Pitfalls
- Paying for growth twice — buying at a premium multiple AND modeling aggressive growth
- Ignoring working capital — fast-growing businesses consume cash in receivables and inventory
- Straight-line margin expansion — identify specific cost levers, not just "we'll get more efficient"
- Bolt-on accretion math without integration cost — acquisition synergies take time and money
- Exit multiple = entry multiple — market conditions change over 5 years
Related Skills
/pe-growth — minority growth equity investments
/private-credit — direct lending and subordinate debt
/secondaries — LP secondaries and GP-led continuation vehicles
/lbo — focused LBO modeling tool (lighter than full buyout analysis)
/sell-side — when running the sell-side process for portfolio companies