Katana VentraIP

Private equity firm

A private equity firm is an investment management company that provides financial backing and makes investments in the private equity of startup or operating companies through a variety of loosely affiliated investment strategies including leveraged buyout, venture capital, and growth capital. Often described as a financial sponsor, each firm will raise funds that will be invested in accordance with one or more specific investment strategies.

Typically, a private equity firm will raise pools of capital, or private-equity funds that supply the equity contributions for these transactions. Private equity firms will receive a periodic management fee as well as a share in the profits earned (carried interest) from each private-equity fund managed.


Private equity firms, with their investors, will acquire a controlling or substantial minority position in a company and then look to maximize the value of that investment. Private equity firms generally receive a return on their investments through one of the following avenues:


Private equity firms characteristically make longer-hold investments in target industry sectors or specific investment areas where they have expertise. Private equity firms and investment funds should not be confused with hedge fund firms, which typically make shorter-term investments in securities and other more liquid assets within an industry sector but with less direct influence or control over the operations of a specific company. Where private equity firms take on operational roles to manage risks and achieve growth through long-term investments, hedge funds more frequently act as short-term traders of securities betting on both the up and down sides of a business or of an industry sector's financial health.[1]

History of private equity and venture capital

Leveraged buyout

List of private-equity firms

Management buyout

Private-equity fund

"A Dignified Death: Hospices in the U.S. are increasingly run by for-profit providers, and a lack of regulation allows them to deliver abysmal end-of-life care", by the editors, , vol. 330, no. 2 (February 2024), pp. 68–69. "Today [in the U.S.] nearly three quarters of hospice agencies operate on a for-profit basis. The sector has become so lucrative that in recent years private equity firms and publicly traded corporations have been snapping up previously nonprofit hospices at record rates. This... has had pernicious effects on hospice care in the U.S." (p. 68.)

Scientific American

. Pensions Investment Research Consultants for the Trades Union Congress.

Private equity – a guide for pension fund trustees

Krüger Andersen, Thomas. . Private Equity and Hedge Funds 2007.

Legal Structure of Private Equity Funds

Prowse, Stephen D. , Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, 1998.

The Economics of the Private Equity Market