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KKR's Pete Stavros just blazed a new trail for private equity by closing the sale of C.H.I Overhead Doors, and accomplished a life-long goal in the process

Jul 1, 2022, 15:45 IST
Business Insider
KKR's Pete StavrosKKR

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Usually when private equity comes in, line workers and office managers feel a sense of dread. Private-equity firms are known for slashing headcount and picking apart business lines.

But KKR just made a lot of hourly employees, including factory staff and truck drivers, very happy.

The private investor, with roughly $471 billion in assets under management, just sold C.H.I Overhead Doors to Nucor Corporation for $3 billion this month. It's a significant payout for KKR, which will make 10 times the equity it invested in the door manufacturer back in 2015. But it's a mega payday for C.H.I's workforce, who effectively held equity in the company.

Workers lined up to collect their pay packets — which paid hourly workers an average of $175,000 — when KKR completed the sale of C.H.I to Nucor.

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The idea to offer equity to staff across C.H.I's organizational chart stemmed from Pete Stavros, the co-head of US private equity at KKR. He told CNBC that his dad was a construction worker for 45 years who loved his job but couldn't create wealth on an hourly wage.

It's a common problem for many Americans living paycheck to paycheck. Stavros said he first contemplated the idea to introduce equity-linked initiatives to broader workforces when he was in business school.

Under Stavros' watch, KKR has awarded billions of dollars in total equity value to over 45,000 non-senior employees across 25 KKR-backed companies. This strategy started with KKR's industrials companies, like C.H.I, a company spokesperson told Insider.

And if C.H.I's staff reactions are anything to go by, this incentive is sure to improve the lives of employees at many KKR-backed companies — from C-suite execs to office managers.

Stavros also helped launch Ownership Works, a nonprofit that partners with companies and investment firms to provide employees with strategies to build wealth.

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Since joining KKR in 2005, Stavros has led the firm's investments in data company Nielsen and industrials giant Gardner Denver / Ingersoll Rand, among others.

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