Eric Schmidt is reprising the adult supervisory role he played with Google's young founders. Not for him the frivolity of, say, a sports team investment like the $2-billion Steve Ballmer paid for basketball's Los Angeles Clippers. The Google executive chairman's family vehicle, Hillspire, is instead buying 20 per cent of $36-billion hedge fund firm DE Shaw from the estate of bankrupt Lehman Brothers.
Passive investments in private hedge fund management firms are awkward assets. Controlling founders, in this case David Shaw, can typically veto any transfer. They also value their privacy. Affiliated Managers made Lehman an offer north of $500 million for the same stake in 2014, according to news reports, but that deal didn't happen. One reason may be that public companies like AMG can't guarantee keeping information on their holdings to themselves.
That leaves few natural buyers. Lehman bought pieces of a number of hedge funds before the financial crisis, and some other institutions have also purchased slices. Neuberger Berman's Dyal Capital Partners unit specialises in such investments, recently snapping up a 20 per cent stake in activist firm Jana Partners. Family offices regularly seed new hedge fund firms. But Schmidt's purchase of a big existing stake is unusual.
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Assuming the price represents the five-to-seven times earnings typical in such deals, Hillspire will get an investment yield in double digits, a rare beast these days. Still, such a big bet on one firm is a testament both to the Google chairman's huge wealth - estimated by Forbes at $9.3 billion - and to his belief in DE Shaw. It's a very grown-up kind of investment.