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gruezlast Sunday at 10:58 PM4 repliesview on HN

>Public companies cannot and will not just fire all staff, fleece customers to the point they won’t return and take on debt that they have no intention of paying back.

Why? Is there some code of conduct for public companies but not private ones?


Replies

darth_avocadolast Sunday at 11:10 PM

> Is there some code of conduct for public companies but not private ones?

No but there’s a difference between private companies and PE owned companies. PE model is very different from regular private companies, and it often involves extracting maximum profits at the expense of the company itself.

And as far as public companies go, shareholders will have to say something about the operation of the company if you start intentionally sinking it.

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andrew_lettucelast Monday at 12:12 AM

Because a PE fund is at most a seven year timeline, and everybody knows it. There is absolutely no incentive to add value beyond the next sale, and often you only need to add the perception of value. To quote my CTO of a PE owned company: "we want to make it look like we're on the road to <big investment in strategic roadmap>", not actually accomplish it

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Supermancholast Sunday at 11:11 PM

> Is there some code of conduct for public companies but not private ones?

There's a pattern of behavior, to be sure. The primary control on public companies is shareholder scrutiny. Gutting your company for short term gains, is not always popular. The more diverse the shareholder cohort, the less popular it tends to be.

Private companies don't mind it when they can literally start a new company with the assets from the old without the pesky plebian investors.

Ofc you know this.

hylaridelast Monday at 2:27 PM

> Is there some code of conduct for public companies but not private ones?

It's more about Private Equity firms than private companies. The oversimplified TL;DR strategy for most PE firms is acquire, strip, pump, then dump (combined with all sorts of tax strategies). Most PE firms don't own the companies themselves, but act on behalf of investors and take a cut of the ultimate profits. So it's basically tons of short term thinking.