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Some of the big PE tech guys will do light turnarounds. The problem in tech is that a lot of distressed situations are the result of pretty critical product issues/getting leapfrogged by a competitor. So it's not a gradual/small decline, but a huge "fuck me" type of situation.

I do know a smaller firm that does them. Garbage site but he's done some real deals: https://tech-rx.com/

I would look @ who has worked with these guys btw, they are very well known: https://techcrunch.com/2020/04/13/silicon-valley-restructuring-veteran-…

BTW, "fuck me" sits can be fixed, but it's really hard in tech because a big part of successful tech companies is amazing culture + smart people and those smart people attracting more smart people.

 

Know anything else about them? Reputation/performance/culture/recruitment?

 

Not specifically distressed/workout, but Siris Capital is a TMT buyout fund focused on markets with secular headwinds. Pretty sure they do mostly value-oriented/hairy deals. Don't know them super well but could be worth a look.

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It's funny because I would never have thought of "distressed tech" as an actual thing folks could focus on...but now the question has been asked, I'm sure there are versions of it out there.

I agree with the above on Clearlake - they are animals. I'd argue some "tech with hair" is very different than actual "distressed tech" - I haven't seen too many Saas companies go through BK. But hey, you never know - especially with how highly levered some of these deals are and this current market.

 

"Distressed" may not be a great word for it, but the top "tech-focused" value-oriented shops out there are Vector, Siris, STG, and arguably Marlin and Clearlake. Vector, Siris and STG are explicitly tech-only strategies, while the others tend to invest across lots of industries (though Marlin seems to be doing a stupid amount of enterprise software these days).

Like the comments above have mentioned, distressed tech is pretty challenging for a number of reasons, but I think we'll start seeing more of through buyouts of legacy tech companies that just aren't keeping up. Vector's been doing a lot of that recently, which makes sense given they also have a credit strategy and the CEOs of these companies desperately need loans before they realize what they actually need is a fat paycheck from a buyout firm.

 

Will probably catch some MS for this as it is incredibly competitive in terms of recruiting, but anything Apollo will have a turnaround aspect to it. Have seen details on a few of their tech deals, and trust me, they are shockingly low valuation multiples with really bespoke turnaround plans. Feel free to shoot me a PM if you would like more details.

 

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