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In reply to the discussion: Kraft Heinz cut expenses too deeply under private equity management, its new CEO says [View all]BumRushDaShow
(168,032 posts)In "theory", that is NOT how they are supposed to work.
But IN PRACTICE, buying up sometimes struggling businesses (most recently, hospital systems), where, without ANY knowledge about the business they are funding, they gut the place and spit out the remains.
Go do a search on all the "hospital systems" that were destroyed by the greed of the "practice".
As an example, here in the Philly metro area in Delaware County, a hospital that was founded in 1893, that gradually went through a series of mergers over a century to create a "hospital system", with multiple affiliated hospitals, runs into a hedge fund group that parachuted in from California (Prospect Medical Holdings), who saw a gold mine to exploit.
And as they drained the place, closing 2 of the hospitals as they were feasting, the state of PA sued to halt the corporate largess -
By Kenny Cooper Updated Oct. 30, 2024 3:25 pm
(snip)
The effects of private equity on Delcos health care
Kearney highlighted the necessity to remember Prospects original sin.
In 2019, the private equity firm, Leonard Green & Partners, loaded Prospect Medical Holdings with hundreds of millions of dollars in debt in exchange for a massive stakeholder dividend, Kearney said. This weakened Crozer financially, turning it into a house of cards.
Prospect first acquired Crozer in 2016. Henry asserted that Prospect agreed to keep acute care services at its four hospitals open for a period of no less than 10 years. Now, only two of its hospitals are operational. Krueger said her district has been forced to live with the fallout of private equity.
I have lost count of the number of times a nurse or doctor has reached out to me to tell me they didnt have the supplies that they needed to treat their patients because Prospect refused to pay the vendor bill or that their caseloads were unmanageable because Prospect wasnt willing to schedule enough nurses or doctors for that shift, Krueger said.
(snip)
These were known vulture capitalists -
By Kenny Cooper May 23, 2022
(snip)
But healthcare observers say Crozers troubles go back to a business deal that was initiated in 2019 one that Pennsylvania officials were warned about, but had little power to stop.
That deal was made between Prospects previous owner, a private equity firm called Leonard Green & Partners, according to ProPublica. The firm siphoned $645 million from Prospect before announcing a deal to sell it in October 2019. The ProPublica report details how the transaction would hobble Prospect with $1.3 billion in lease obligations. This is after the company sold most of the hospital land to a real estate investment firm.
Leonard Green & Partners, which owned about 60% of the hospital chain, wanted to pass along its share to Prospect CEO Sam Lee and his associate, David Topper, for $12 million. This would give them 100% ownership control over Prospect.
The catch? The $12 million bill was footed by Prospect, and not the two executives a deal that some believed was sure to leave hospitals owned by Prospect in dire financial straits.
(snip)
Last year, the rest of the hospitals in the system closed down, leaving the 5th largest county in the state of PA by population, with ZERO hospitals.
Right now, through various efforts, as of last month, a buyer was found and things are happening to put the pieces back together.