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  • Private equity may regret inviting in mom and dad

    Private equity may regret inviting in mom and dad

    Ludovic Phalippou is professor of financial economics at the University of Oxford’s Saïd Business School. William Magnuson is a law professor at Texas A&M University.

    In August, a White House executive order quietly triggered a major shift in US financial markets. It called on agencies to “democratise” access to private equity, private credit and digital assets (including Bitcoin) for 401(k) retirement savers.

    While barely registering in the broader news cycle, this marks a significant departure from long-standing regulatory practice and accelerates a trend more than a decade in the making: the migration of private equity from institutional capital pools into the savings of everyday investors. Moreover, it could come back to bite the industry that lobbied for it.

    For nearly a century, securities regulation rested on a clear divide. Public companies, because they raise money from ordinary people, must follow strict disclosure, reporting and governance rules. Private companies, which raise money only from institutions and wealthy individuals, operate under far lighter oversight. And private equity has flourished on the light touch regulatory side of the divide. It could use valuation methods, fee practices and contractual structures that would be difficult to defend in public markets, because its investors were assumed to be sophisticated and legally equipped to protect themselves.

    Once retail investors enter the picture, that assumption becomes untenable. And with it, the legal equilibrium the industry has relied on begins to unravel.

    A shift with legal consequences

    As private equity expands from institutional clients to household savers, it enters a fundamentally different legal environment. Institutional investors routinely tolerate problematic practices because open disputes can jeopardise access to future funds, strain professional relationships or undermine career aspirations. Retail investors face none of these pressures. They have no reason to resolve concerns quietly and no commercial interest in preserving relationships with fund managers. When they believe they were not adequately informed, they are far more willing to pursue formal claims.

    The tobacco cases from the 1990s revealed something important: even when risks are widely known by experts, courts may still conclude that consumers are not properly informed about them.

    Against that backdrop, the retailisation of private equity stands out. Investors are being shown performance numbers that do not behave like returns, fee structures whose economic impact is far larger than the headline figures suggest and liquidity provisions that function very differently from how they sound. Class actions have been rare in private markets, but the gap between representation and reality here is large enough that a tobacco-style challenge is no longer far-fetched.

    Performance metrics that do not behave as advertised

    The internal rate of return, or IRR, dominates private equity performance reporting. It is almost universally read as an annual rate of return, yet it is nothing of the kind. IRR is simply the discount rate that makes a series of cash flows sum to zero; it says little about how an investor’s wealth actually accumulates over time.

    Worse, because IRR is highly sensitive to early cash flows, a fund can report a very high IRR even when long-run performance is modest. In addition, the IRR becomes almost immovable, giving the illusion of stable and high performance across business cycles.

    A plaintiff’s lawyer will have little difficulty arguing that presenting IRR as an annualised return metric is misleading to average investors. Courts have repeatedly held that disclosures must be judged from the standpoint of a reasonable investor. Once the investor base shifts, so does the legal standard.

    Valuations that shape fees, liquidity and outcomes

    Private equity valuations create similar vulnerabilities. Because portfolio companies are illiquid, managers set their own estimates of “fair value,” which in turn affect reported performance and the prices at which semi-liquid vehicles admit or redeem investors.

    An accounting quirk has long permitted funds to buy secondary stakes in PE funds at a discount to net asset value and then immediately mark them up to NAV, recording outsized gains. This is maybe understandable in a world of consenting institutional investing adults. But this game has recently moved to retail-oriented funds.

    Retail investors who transact at inflated prices are exposed to direct financial loss. When valuations diverge materially from observable market levels, the potential for litigation becomes difficult to ignore.

    Fees whose true magnitude is difficult to discern

    Fees present a similar problem. They are typically described to investors in the familiar shorthand of “two and twenty with an eight per cent hurdle.” But in most cases, there is also a provision known as a catch-up clause. Once returns exceed roughly ten per cent, the manager receives the same compensation as if the hurdle had been set at zero. In other words, a feature presented as investor protection often has little practical effect. This is only one example among many in which terms that appear straightforward can be deeply misleading. In an institutional setting, these conventions are likely to be understood; for retail investors, the odds are different.

    Liquidity aligns poorly with expectations

    Semi-liquid private equity products are frequently described in terms that resemble mutual funds. In practice, redemptions are often capped at low percentages of net asset value and remain subject to manager discretion. In times of financial stress, precisely when most investors are most likely to need their funds, they could face delays of five years or more to be able to withdraw their money.

    Nothing about this structure is inherently problematic for investors who understand it. But if savers are sold “semi-liquid” products without understanding that liquidity is conditional and very limited, then claims of misrepresentation become plausible.

    A coming wave

    For decades, private equity has operated in a legal environment defined by deference: deference to contract, to sophistication and to private ordering. That environment is changing. As retail capital flows into the industry, the legal framework shifts from one based on negotiated expectations to one based on statutory protections and judicial interpretation. Contract law, consumer-protection law, tort principles and fiduciary doctrines all provide routes to challenge practices that were previously insulated.

    The irony is clear. In seeking access to public capital without accepting public-company obligations, private equity may have exposed itself to a much more demanding form of accountability. Regulators may hesitate to intervene, but courts do not face the same constraints. Once a critical mass of retail investors experiences losses or mismatches between marketing and reality, class actions are likely to follow.

    For years, the industry has equated “democratisation” with access to more assets and more fees. It may soon realise that what has actually been democratised is legal risk.

    Further reading:

    — The delusion of private equity IRRs (FTAV)

    — Another problem with IRRs (FTAV)

    — The volatility laundering, return manipulation and ‘phoney happiness’ of private equity (FTAV)

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  • UK doctors urge crackdown on energy drinks after man downs 8 cans per day, has a stroke

    UK doctors urge crackdown on energy drinks after man downs 8 cans per day, has a stroke

    Published on

    A “previously fit and well” UK man had a stroke after downing eight energy drinks per day, prompting…

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  • Kenilworth man takes on 12 Dips of Christmas cold-water swims for sister

    Kenilworth man takes on 12 Dips of Christmas cold-water swims for sister

    Shannen HeadleyWest Midlands

    Will Johnston A man underwater wearing goggles and a snorkelWill Johnston

    Will Johnston is plunging into cold water 12 times across the month of December

    A photographer is plunging into icy cold water for charity after his sister was diagnosed with breast cancer.

    Will Johnston,…

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  • Google Photos now lets you quickly edit videos, add music, and share like CapCut 
(HT Tech)

    Google Photos now lets you quickly edit videos, add music, and share like CapCut (HT Tech)

    Google is expanding the creative potential of its Photos app by introducing a new video editor that offers Android and iOS users more control over their video clips. The update follows the recent launch of the Google Photos Recap feature and…

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  • Amazon to invest over $35 billion in India on AI, exports – Reuters

    1. Amazon to invest over $35 billion in India on AI, exports  Reuters
    2. How Amazon’s $35 Billion India Plan Supports Atmanirbhar Bharat Explained  Menafn
    3. Amazon to invest USD 35 billion in India by 2030 to power Atmanirbhar Bharat vision  Babushahi.com
    4. Amazon – set a goal of enabling $80 billion in cumulative ecommerce exports from India by 2030  marketscreener.com
    5. Amazon plans 10 lakh new India jobs by 2030 after firing 14,000 employees globally  India Today

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  • Yen fragile, dollar firm in countdown to Fed – Reuters

    1. Yen fragile, dollar firm in countdown to Fed  Reuters
    2. Yen weak, dollar steady in countdown to Fed  Business Recorder
    3. Japanese Yen rebounds vs USD amid BoJ rate hike bets and Fed outlook  FXStreet
    4. The USDJPY is attacking our expected target-Analysis-10-12-2025  Economies.com
    5. USD/JPY Forecast 10/12: Rallies Ahead of Fed (Video)  DailyForex

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  • Ad hoc – Temenos Announces New Share Buyback Program of up to CHF 100m

    Ad hoc – Temenos Announces New Share Buyback Program of up to CHF 100m

    Ad hoc announcement pursuant to Art. 53 LR

    GRAND-LANCY, Switzerland, December 10, 2025 – Temenos AG (SIX: TEMN), a global leader in banking technology, today announces a new share buyback program of up to CHF 100m, which will commence on December 11, 2025 and last until December 30, 2026 at the latest.

    The shares will be repurchased through the ordinary trading line and will be used for general business purposes, including employee equity incentive plans and/or the financing of potential acquisitions.

    The share buyback is supported by Temenos’ strong free cash flow generation. The company expects its leverage to be within the target range of 1.0 to 1.5x net debt to non-IFRS EBITDA by year-end 2026.

    Further details of the share buyback will be made available here.

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  • LMS Hosting Services joins Moodle’s network of Certified Partners

    LMS Hosting Services joins Moodle’s network of Certified Partners

    Moodle today announced that LMS Hosting Services has joined the Moodle Certified Partner network. Based in Perth, Western Australia (the birthplace and home of Moodle), this partnership marks a strategic milestone in delivering high-quality, scalable eLearning solutions to the education, government, and corporate sectors across Australia and the wider Asia Pacific (APAC) region.

    “For us, becoming a Moodle Certified Partner was about more than recognition,” said Michael Claydon, Managing Director of LMS Hosting Services. “We wanted to demonstrate our unwavering dedication to excellence, innovation, and reliability in the digital learning space. This partnership allows us to deepen our contribution to the global Moodle community while ensuring our clients receive support and services that meet the most rigorous industry standards.”

    The announcement comes at a time when the demand for high-quality online learning in the APAC region is accelerating. Organisations are rapidly expanding their digital training capabilities but often face challenges related to varying levels of digital maturity and a lack of in-house technical expertise. LMS Hosting Services aims to bridge this gap by offering deep support and training to ensure successful adoption. By providing modern cloud infrastructure and customised learning environments, they position themselves as a vital resource for clients who rely on eLearning to drive productivity and compliance in a competitive market.

    Claydon added, “Partnering with Moodle ensures every client we work with gains not just a provider, but a trusted expert aligned with Moodle’s vision, roadmap, and best practices. Our goal has always been to empower organisations to create meaningful and impactful learning experiences, and this certification strengthens our ability to do exactly that.”

    LMS Hosting Services promotes a fully managed Moodle service designed to eliminate technical complexity for its clients. Their comprehensive offering includes high-performance hosting, full site installations, and custom theme development to ensure platforms are secure, fast, and brand-aligned. Beyond technical setup, the organisation provides extensive ongoing support, including unlimited staff training, course-building assistance, and consultancy. They specialise in optimising Moodle environments to streamline workflows and build effective, scalable learning experiences.

    A prime example of LMS Hosting Services’ technical capability and innovation is their creation of an API for PowerPro, a Student Management System built specifically for modern Registered Training Organisations (RTOs). Fully compliant with the 2025 RTO Standards, AQF, and AVETMISS 8.0, PowerPro integrates seamlessly with Moodle platforms. This solution demonstrates LMS Hosting Services’ ability to extend the Moodle ecosystem, offering clients a powerful API for customisation and a system that delivers complete capability without complexity, backed by real-time support from their locally based team.

    As the newest Moodle Certified Partner, LMS Hosting Services guarantees access to world-class expertise and essential support, ensuring their digital learning initiatives are built upon robust, reliable, and highly functional Moodle foundations.

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  • Salomon’s Plan to Grow in Running and Fashion

    Salomon’s Plan to Grow in Running and Fashion

    PARIS — Gorpcore “doesn’t really exist anymore,” and new competitors piling into the trail running space are “chipping away at our competitive advantage” in the category, said Salomon’s chief executive, Guillaume Meyzenq.

    Those…

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