New York Times Chronicles the Trials and Tribulations of Providence Equity Group

GoLocalProv Business Team

New York Times Chronicles the Trials and Tribulations of Providence Equity Group

For most people who live in Rhode Island, the $40 plus billion private equity group Providence Equity Group is a ghost. The firm was founded by three of GoLocal’s 50 Wealthiest and Most Influential, and despite its relatively low local proflile, it plays big in the global financial game.

Jonathan Nelson, Paul Salem and Glenn Creamer founded the firm in Providence in 1989.

Over the past year and a half, GoLocalProv, the New York Post, other news organizations have penned pieces on the massive financial hit the once-golden fund took when the Edward Snowden scandal unveiled the technological frailty of Altegrity, a company invested in by Prov Equity.

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In January of 2014, GoLocalProv reported, “A blockbuster federal fraud suit filed yesterday against the Virginia security contractor charged with vetting Edward Snowden is having massive reverberations – and nowhere more so than in Providence, where it threatens the legacy of one of Rhode Island’s top financiers and favorite sons.”

Founding Partner of Providence Equity Group, Jonathan Nelson
This week, the New York Times’ Deal Book article entitled, “The Private Equity Firm That Grew Too Fast” published on Friday reported, “It has been a bumpy few years for Mr. Nelson and Providence (Equity Group). In February, one of the firm’s biggest investments, the security screener Altegrity, filed for bankruptcy in the face of fraud accusations. Providence had its entire $800 million stake wiped out, the largest loss in the firm’s 26-year history.”

The Times story also unveils a candid side of self-reflection by Nelson. He tells the New York Times,  “One of our mistakes was definitely style drift…Altegrity was a good example of that.” Style drift is classic investor speak about getting away from one's core competency and where you made your money.

While Providence Equity may have taken some big financial hits recently, the firm has more than $40 billion under management and generates a lot of fees for the partners of a firm that has more than 200 employees. Providence is the base of operation, but the firm also has offices in New York, London, New Delhi, Hong Kong, Singapore and Boston. 

The recent events and the press coverage all point to the question of how will Providence Equity progress in the future - will it continue to be inconsistent in its performance over the past few years or will it recapture its mojo and go on a mega streak?  Stay tuned.


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