From 2010 to 2021, average buyout leverage multiples increased from 5.2 times EBITDA to approximately 6.8 times EBITDA across global private equity transactions, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence (LCD). That leverage concentration creates a portfolio company that performs when conditions are favorable and becomes progressively fragile as interest rates rise, credit tightens, and operating margins compress. The response available to a highly leveraged portfolio company is structurally constrained: reduce labor, compress operating expenses, and accelerate exit before the fragility becomes the story. These decisions destroy the organizational knowledge, workforce cohesion, and operational quality that generate durable enterprise value. They are not poor judgment. They are the logical response to an architecture that has no other tools available.
In PwC's Global Private Equity Responsible Investment Survey, 53 percent of firms reported declining at least one investment in the prior year over ESG concerns, yet far fewer have built a structure to measure long-term impact. The gap between recognition and architecture is the ESG problem in its most precise form. Recognizing a risk and building a structure that addresses it are different activities. The SAVI Capital Model is the structure, not the recognition.