Thread regarding Cengage layoffs

Apollo....the Mob but dressed in Armani?

he classic Apollo playbook:

Buy distressed debt at 60 cents on the dollar
Take control of the company
Extract management fees, dividend recaps, sale-leasebacks
Pile on more debt to fund those extractions
Flip it or take it public at an inflated valuation
Leave the debt burden with the company and its workers

They got extraordinarily rich essentially being vultures with spreadsheets. Toys R Us being the most notorious example — a viable retail business that might have navigated the Amazon era with investment, instead bled dry to service the debt load private equity strapped to it, then liquidated. 30,000 jobs gone.
The reversal now:
The very mechanism that made them wealthy — cheap abundant debt — is now the thing squeezing their portfolio companies. They loaded businesses with floating rate debt when rates were near zero. Now those same companies are paying 8-9% on debt that cost 3% when the deal was done. The interest coverage ratios that looked comfortable in the pitch deck are underwater in reality.

Apollo's problem today:
Their Private debt funds are being squeezed.... Investors are queuing to withdraw their money, but Apollo, ever the masters at extracting cash are blocking investors from extracting their cash.
Their own fundraising depends on showing strong returns
Strong returns depend on not marking assets down
Not marking down depends on not being forced to sell
Not being forced to sell depends on keeping redemption gates in place
Gates signal distress which makes future fundraising harder
It's a trap of their own construction.
The human cost dimension:
What makes it genuinely poetic rather than just financially interesting is that the people who will suffer least are the Apollo partners who already extracted their carry and management fees in cash — that money is gone, sitting in their personal accounts, insulated from whatever happens to the funds now. The people who suffer most will be:

Pension beneficiaries whose funds allocated to private credit chasing yield
Workers at portfolio companies that get restructured when the debt becomes unserviceable
Retail investors who got sold private credit products in the democratization push of the last few years

The democratization push was particularly cynical — Blackstone, Apollo et al spent the last 5 years lobbying to open private markets to retail investors, framed as giving ordinary people access to returns previously reserved for institutions. In reality they were hunting for new pools of capital to absorb the assets institutions were quietly becoming reluctant to buy at current valuations. Distributing the risk downward while keeping the fees flowing upward.
The SEC under the previous administration largely went along with it. Whether the current regulatory environment does anything about it is another question entirely — though given the administration's general disposition toward financial deregulation, probably not.
The deeper irony is that the whole private equity model was built on information asymmetry and complexity as a moat — if you can't price it, you can't challenge the valuation. That same opacity that let them extract value on the way up is now the thing preventing orderly price discovery on the way down. They built a machine that works brilliantly in one direction and catastrophically in the other.
Though as usual, the architects of the situation will be largely fine.
The mob analogy is more apt than most financial commentators would dare say — and the structural parallel is remarkably precise.
The bust-out:
What the mob called a "bust-out" is almost textbook private equity in distressed situations:

Take control of a business
Immediately establish credibility and access to credit
Draw down every available credit line
Extract cash through fees, dividends, sale-leasebacks of assets
Leave the hollowed shell with the debt
Walk away before the collapse

The only difference is the mob used fear and the occasional arson. Apollo uses leveraged buyout agreements, management fee structures, and Delaware holding company law. The end result for the target company and its stakeholders is frequently identical.
The Sears case study:
Eddie Lampert's destruction of Sears is almost a perfect bust-out in slow motion:

Merged Kmart and Sears creating a vehicle loaded with real estate value
Spun off the real estate into a REIT — Seritage — extracting the most valuable assets into a separate entity he controlled
Starved the retail operations of capital investment while collecting fees
Watched the retail business deteriorate "unexpectedly"
Meanwhile the real estate value had already been extracted
175,000 jobs eventually gone
Lampert personally fine, operating from his yacht in Miami

The language is Orwellian by design:

"Operational efficiency" = cutting staff and maintenance
"Rightsizing the balance sheet" = loading debt onto the target
"Unlocking hidden value" = selling assets the company needs to operate
"Strategic transformation" = preparing for bankruptcy while extracting fees
"Aligning management incentives" = giving executives options to flip quickly while workers get nothing
"Patient long term capital" = we have a 7 year fund life before we have to show returns

The vocabulary is specifically engineered to sound like value creation while describing value extraction. McKinsey does the same thing — provides the intellectual laundering that makes looting sound like strategy.
The legal architecture is the real innovation:
What makes it genuinely different from the mob — and arguably more insidious — is that generations of lawyers, lobbyists and academics built a legal architecture that made it not just legal but celebrated:

Delaware corporate law optimized for shareholder extraction
Carried interest tax treatment meaning PE profits taxed at capital gains rates not income
Bankruptcy law allowing secured creditors (the PE fund) to jump ahead of workers and pensioners
ERISA rules that let pension obligations be shed in restructuring
Limited partner structures insulating the fund managers from portfolio company liabilities

The mob had to corrupt individual judges and officials. PE corrupted the entire legislative and regulatory framework over decades through campaign finance and the revolving door. Far more efficient.
The revolving door completes the circle:
The regulatory capture is almost total. SEC commissioners become PE partners. Treasury officials join Apollo or Blackstone. Fed governors sit on advisory boards. The people who should be watching the store have a financial interest in not watching too carefully — because their post-government career depends on the industry's goodwill.
Where it differs from the mob:
The mob at least had a certain redistributive quality within their community — the money circulated locally, bought loyalty, funded neighborhoods. PE extracts value and concentrates it among a remarkably small number of people. The carried interest on a successful fund can make a handful of partners billionaires while the pension fund that provided the capital gets an 8% return it could have gotten in an index fund with zero fees and zero complexity.
The cultural damage:
Perhaps the most lasting harm is what it did to the idea of business itself. A generation of the most talented people from the best universities went into finance and private equity not to build things but to financialize things that already existed. The engineering talent that built America's industrial base was replaced by financial engineers whose skill was not creation but extraction. That's a civilizational cost that doesn't show up in any fund's IRR calculation.
The instinct that it's essentially organized crime with better tailoring is — while impolite in polite company — analytically pretty hard to refute.


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| 1907 views | | 15 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kregvbea

15 replies (most recent on top)

@2fb Iagree with everything you said about the current ET

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Post ID: @2fd+1kregvbea

Yep you got it at first pass . What a sad pathetic bunch. I mean us as so many of us drank the Kool-Aid when the evidence was plain to see. Didn’t any of us have a nagging doubt?

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Post ID: @2fc+1kregvbea

@2f9 yep got it one. MH used to have cooking shows on first Fridays from his Tribeca Condo with black employees . Search him on linked in and see his European vacation with his sons while 100 long tenured people who dedicated their lives to the business get fired. Tin eared and immensely self regarding. Anyone remember his lengthy monologues on his visits to DAVOS as if he was a peer of those people rather than a distant wannabe? ( How much did THOSE vanity trips cost???) All of the ET are poseurs and ex /failed consultants. The Peruvian guy is the absolute study in fake/pretend/zero operational understanding and life coach dependent, zero talent/emotional/Intelligence /wannabe CEO but too shallow and self obsessed to ever come close. The CTO? Beyond redemption; self serving,”, paranoid egomaniac, talentless fraud. The grim reaper COO… truly a sociopath who failed at the co-GM higher Ed job. The CFO….trading on a mythical former life and a bully. Actually he’s a redirect the blame guy with probably little self confidence and a well placed imposter syndrome.
So ya you’re seeing a familiar movie just different initials.

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Post ID: @2fb+1kregvbea

what depresses me is how this Apollo process happens again and again. Im writing from the perspective of someone who has lived this elsewhere. TWICE. The 2nd time when they were announced as the “savours” my heart sank. The OP is so accurate I have to wonder if he/she is ex Apollo.Both times the CEO showed themselves ( one man one woman) to be the greedy, self important blood su---r they truly were. Reading over this series of threads it seemed all too familiar. Even though I have no idea who the initials peppering all the posts and comments , their descriptions and the involvement of Apollo match perfectly. Regardless , let me ask a couple of questions to be sure: An Executive team that doesn’t visit customers unless its an orchestrated made for media event? A CEO who postures as a thought leader and posts with his family on linkedin while firing employees with 20 years dedication to the company? A CEO who pretended to be a progressive,caring,sharing man of the people cynically using people of color in vids and town halls to bolster his credentials…..and now has pivoted to a hard assed businessman and realist? An ET made up of ex Boston Consulting/ McKinsey types who play act at business but in reality have never had to build anything other than their ego? Am I on point or have I got this wrong? Hubris has always seemed to be the common feature in my experience when it comes to Apollo and Executive leadership who have run out of ideas and want to cash in their chips.

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Post ID: @2f9+1kregvbea

Apollo will just gut this business and move on to the next one. Seeing MH pretend to be some sort of global thought leader when he is just an errand boy surrounded by consultancy hacks is sickening. Not one of the ET has any real operational experience. They’re just mo--ns parachuted in at the top to slash and burn. They don’t visit customers, treat their direct reports like garbage and consult their life coaches

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Post ID: @28j+1kregvbea

APOLLO OWNS THE VENETIAN!!

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Post ID: @wt+1kregvbea

MH and all these new execs are doing what they’re told and executing Apollo’s playbook to the letter. They’re all go make a packet while we pick up the pieces. MH will fake his way through. Final Town Hall “ I gave my heart and souls to the business” then retreat to hi $20 million TriBeCa condo. Think back to all his posing and performative nonsense all these years…god we are su-kers! this new crew are only in it for the IPO payoff. All this stuff/cuts/reorgs are only for the purposes of the IPO. The business will be a hollow shell when the impact off all this hits but Apollo and all these pretenders will be gone counting their money.

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Post ID: @wb+1kregvbea

"lets hold a Summer meeting in Las Vegas at the Venetian"

Aaahhh, nothing like Vegas in July! :O

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Post ID: @q4+1kregvbea

Wait till they reallocate more money from Cengage who they are unloading on the Public with the upcoming IPO... But before we do the IPO, lets hold a Summer meeting in Las Vegas at the Venetian. Why the Venetian??? , because Apollo owns it... and it will allow them to move more money from Cengage into a company they actually want to own.
I hope the regulators catches them... and the IPO is a flop.

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Post ID: @kj+1kregvbea

someone at Apollo or Cengage is down voting the posts and comments LOL

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Post ID: @k6+1kregvbea

This was an interesting read about Apollo: https://www.warren.senate.gov/newsroom/press-releases/in-testimony-warren-calls-out-private-equitys-predatory-practices-stands-with-striking-warrior-met-workers

"Research shows that when private equity takes over a nursing home, short-term mortality rates jump by about 10%."

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Post ID: @dp+1kregvbea

Yup, I want to print and frame this post, then put it on my wall. So I can look at it every day before I start working at Cengage.

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Post ID: @dk+1kregvbea

@a9 you said it. The casino is rigged

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Post ID: @aq+1kregvbea

The language of inevitability:
What makes Apollo and its peers particularly insidious is how they've successfully framed extraction as rescue. "These companies would have failed without us" is the constant refrain. Sometimes true. Often not. But it serves a crucial psychological function — it makes the looting sound like charity. The vandal arrives and says "this building was already falling down, I'm just managing the demolition professionally."
The instinct to call it corporate su----e is right — but perhaps more precisely it's:
"Mu---r when the company was viable and got targeted opportunistically
Assisted dying when management invited them in seeking a quick personal payday
Hospice profiteering when the company was genuinely struggling and Apollo extracted fees from the dying process rather than attempting a cure"

The one honest version of the defense:
To be genuinely fair — there is a legitimate function that private capital serves in theory. Some companies genuinely need restructuring that public market short-termism makes impossible. Taking a company private to do a painful multi-year transformation without quarterly earnings pressure is a real value proposition in principle.
The problem is that structure got colonized by the extraction model. The tool that could have been used for genuine industrial renewal got repurposed as a looting mechanism because the extraction model is simply more profitable and carries no reputational consequence among the people whose opinions matter to Apollo partners.

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Post ID: @aa+1kregvbea

wow

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Post ID: @a9+1kregvbea

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