Most people know very little about private equity firms, what they are, or what they do.
What are private equity firms?
According to Pro Publica:
Those things don’t seem that bad but do not truly explain what happens when a private equity firm takes a controlling stake in a company.
What happens when private equity firms buy a company?
When private equity firms buy or take a significant stake in a company, they do not do it out of the goodness of their hearts; they do it to make huge profits. It’s not the profit-making that is the problem; it's how they achieve those massive profit margins that is the issue.
From Inetenomics:
According to Ballou, this is something different – an industry that has metastasized into a job-killing, business-destroying, community-crushing machine the likes of which we haven’t seen since the money trusts of the nineteenth century. In other words, it’s predatory capitalism on steroids. Most worrisome of all, in Ballou’s view, is the fact that these firms have almost no accountability to the U.S. legal system.
The founders of these companies have become absurdly rich – we’re talking multi-multi-billionaires — so their power in American politics is tremendous. Not only do they influence the political system — increasingly, they are the political system. Just ask men like Timothy Geithner, Newt Gingrich, Paul Ryan, and David Petraeus, all now working in private equity. It’s more than a revolving door between Washington and Wall Street. As Forbes magazine highlights, it’s a “passionate love affair.”
The New York Times has a great article on private equity; here is just one example of what happens when private equity buys a chain of nursing homes.
“ManorCare soon instituted various cost-cutting programs and laid off hundreds of workers. Health code violations spiked. People suffered. The daughter of one resident told The Washington Post that “my mom would call us every day crying when she was in there” and that “it was dirty — like a run-down motel. Roaches and ants all over the place.”
So not only do these companies cause untold pain, but they face no consequences.
The Atlantic detailed more of the horrors and deaths caused by private equity:
Private-equity investment in nursing homes, to take just one example, has grown from about $5 billion at the turn of the century to more than $100 billion today. The results have not been pretty. The industry seems to have recognized that it could improve profit margins by cutting back on staffing while relying more on psychoactive medication. Stories abound of patients being rushed to the hospital after being overprescribed opioids, of bedside call buttons so poorly attended that residents suffer in silence while waiting for help, of nurses being pressured to work while sick with COVID. A 2021 study concluded that private-equity ownership was associated with about 22,500 premature nursing-home deaths from 2005 to 2017—before the wave of death and misery wrought by the pandemic.
Mother Jones goes into more detail on just how destructive these companies are to our society.
These companies make nearly every part of our lives worse and more expensive.
What happens when Private Equity takes over A supplement company?
Private equity companies also own and have controlling stakes in many supplement companies. What happens, in most cases, when a private equity company buys a supplement company or takes a considerable stake in one?
The first thing that happens is staff cuts, wages slashed, and benefits reduced. A lot of institutional knowledge and workings are lost, as the most knowledgeable employees are often the first to go. They have often been there the longest and are usually paid the most, or they quit because they do not like the company's new direction. Consultants like McKinsey & Company are often hired to “justify” these cuts.
The second thing is cheaper raw materials are substituted. This lets the labels and formulas look the same while dramatically reducing costs. Check out our blog, A Tale Of Two Bottles, to learn how two labels can look the same but be very different products.
The third thing that happens is outsourcing. Many companies outsource their manufacturing and quality control departments to questionable third parties, who promise to do the work for significantly less.
Next, the marketing budget increases. Fancy new packaging, advertising, and social media strategies are implemented.
This results in products that cost fifty to seventy percent less to produce while the company increases the prices people pay for them.
So, not only are there a ton of ethical issues with private equity, but the consumer also gets products that are not nearly as good and pays far more for them.
If you want a deep and in-depth look at how damaging private equity is to the very fabric of our society, check out this book.
Does a private equity-owned company sound like an excellent place to get your vitamins from?
Which Supplement Companies Are Owned By Private Equity?
Here are some (definitely not all) well-known supplement companies that are owned by or that private equity has a significant stake in:
Thorne
Metagenics
Vega
Ultima Electrolytes
Muscletech
Swanson
Plant Fusion
Gaia Herbs
Reliance Private Label Vitamins - They make the supplements many health food stores and pharmacies sell under their own label.
Braggs
Nutraceutical
Solaray
Kal
Zhou
Natures Life
Natural Care
LifeTime
Heritage Store
Life Flo
Emerita
Theraneem
Zand
Dynamic Health
Honey Gardens
Sunny Green
All One
Natural Sport
Thompson
Herbs For Kids
Natural Balance
Simplers Botanicals
Floragen
Lipoflavonoid
Genexa
Check out this page to see more companies affected by private equity firms.
While the issues caused by private equity firms may not make the news often, they are one of the biggest drivers of problems in our society, from healthcare to housing costs, food quality, and education.
Rooted Nutrition Says No To Private Equity Owned Supplement Companies
We work very hard to avoid selling products from supplement companies owned by or primarily controlled by private equity companies (and those owned by horrible corporations like Nestle) because people and the environment should come before profits. Partnering with small family-owned companies makes it easier to verify sources of raw materials and ensure that the environment is protected and that farmers and laborers are paid a fair price for their products and labor. It also helps to keep more money in the local communities, which benefits all of us.
It can be hard to know who owns which companies, but whenever possible, choose companies you know are independently owned and work hard to improve their communities and the world. It would make a huge difference if everyone changed a few monthly purchases!
Do you have questions about Private Equity and Supplement Companies?
If you have questions about private equity and supplement companies, email us at info@rooted-nutrition.com, or schedule a free call. We will be happy to answer them!
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