Home Covid-19 How private equity can help regional economies weather the Covid-19 tide PE can work with governments to setup bespoke investment funds to select and support well managed SMEs and mid cap businesses that are adversely impacted by the Covid-19 crisis by Taimoor Labib April 18, 2020 The Covid-19 crisis is having a profound and severe impact on the global economy and will continue to be a generational test for companies, shareholders and their management teams on multiple fronts. Businesses must ensure the safety and well-being of their employees while addressing burning issues that will include massive sales declines, supply chain disruptions and liquidity constraints. Most governments have been fast to act to halt the tide of the virus through various methods while also initiating massive stimulus packages. The $2.2 trillion fiscal stimulus package is the largest in US history at 10 per cent of US GDP, with further stimulus packages expected in the near future. The UK stimulus package announced to date is at least 50 per cent higher than its Global Financial Crisis (GFC) stimulus package a decade ago and is expected to be 5-10 per cent of GDP depending on the evolution of the Covid-19 crisis. Closer to home, Saudi Arabia and the UAE governments were very fast to respond, rightly so, and activate emergency stimulus measures to support households and small businesses in order to mitigate the impact of the Covid-19 shock. Saudi Arabia has announced a SAR170bn package to support the local economy, the UAE has announced a Dhs256bn package to support lenders and boost local small and medium enterprises (SMEs), and Egypt has announced a EGP100bn stimulus package as well. SMEs are a key pillar of our regional economies. In the UAE, for instance, SMEs constitute 98 per cent of the companies operating in the country amounting to 52 per cent of the non-oil GDP. Governments have taken the right decision by making SMEs and mid cap companies a key beneficiary of their stimulus programmes. In our view, the Covid-19 crisis is inherently different from the 2008 financial crisis. The 2008 GFC was predominantly a credit crisis, which had a massive spill-over effect on the broader economy. Once the credit markets were stabilised, the stimulus programmes helped restore credit flows in the economy. The 2008 recession was relatively short as the damage was more contained and did not touch everyone globally. As for the Covid-19 crisis, this has started as a health crisis and is turning into a large-scale economic crisis resulting in a drastic slowdown in global economic growth and unfortunately will have a significant and direct impact on almost all businesses. We therefore believe that the government stimulus programmes will need to be very specific and direct in their responses (as opposed to the liquidity and credit focused measures of 2008). The economic recovery in our region will substantially depend on the recovery and growth of SMEs who previously had solid business fundamentals and promising growth prospects but are now suffering from liquidity issues caused by the Covid-19 impact. Many companies built on unsound business models and capital structures, unfortunately, will not survive. We believe that private equity firms, with their extensive investment and portfolio management expertise, are well positioned to partner with governments in creating bespoke investment funds to select and support well managed companies. The focus should be on companies with the highest potential of supporting the local economy in the medium to long term (e.g. creating the most jobs, building local expertise, and thriving businesses once the worst is behind us). This partnership can be accomplished in a variety of ways including setting up dedicated SME focused private equity funds or through co-investment programmes. For governments, targeting SMEs make a lot of sense – they are locally owned, employ a large share of the workforce and are likely to create the most meaningful economic impact. However, identifying eligible small and medium businesses can be challenging and tricky. The focus must be on supporting good quality businesses that are fundamentally sound and are impacted negatively solely due to Covid-19. Private equity firms can work closely with governments to identify suitable recipients of government investments – essentially, well-run companies with good business models that are likely to make a meaningful economic impact with the support of an equity infusion from local governments and hardcore oversight from their private equity partners. SMEs and mid cap companies in our region have limited access to private capital sources as the penetration of private capital in our markets is much lower than that of developed markets. SMEs therefore seek to benefit from private equity investments as well as traditional stimulus programmes in the form of tax breaks or subsidised loans. An equity injection into small and medium businesses will initially address solvency and capital structure concerns, and will subsequently allow small businesses to fully leverage the stimulus programmes to grow and expand their operations, whereas an additional debt burden, irrespective of whether it is subsidised or otherwise, can still lead to an unmanageable capital structure. In addition to the financial backing, private equity investors can provide extensive leadership support in navigating crisis situations by working closely with founders and management teams to optimise liquidity, introduce key KPIs, improve capital structure, help attract senior talent, and capitalise on market share growth opportunities through accretive expansions and acquisitions. To reinvigorate the economy out of the Covid-19 crisis, the government stimulus programmes are a fantastic start. However, the specifics of how the money is deployed and in what form within the capital structure will be critical to getting the regional and global economies back on track. Private equity can be a valuable partner in ensuring that the stimulus benefits reach the companies with best long-term viability and we stand ready to do our part in building and growing our markets. Taimoor Labib is a founding partner at Affirma Capital where he is the head of Middle East & North Africa (MENA) and chairman of Africa Private Equity 0 Comments