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LLCP Closes Oversubscribed Fund VII With Over $3.6 Billion of Capital Commitments

LLCP Closes Oversubscribed Fund VII With Over $3.6 Billion of Capital Commitments

Business Wire09-07-2025
LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Levine Leichtman Capital Partners ('LLCP'), a Los Angeles-based private equity firm, today announced the final closing of LLCP Fund VII ('Fund VII') with total capital commitments of over $3.6 billion, materially exceeding its target. The fund was significantly oversubscribed despite one of the most challenging fundraising environments in recent history, receiving strong support from its existing investor base as well as a diverse set of new institutional investors. LLCP has raised well over $4 billion of capital across its platform in the last twenty-four months, including substantial co-investment capital.
LLCP attributes its fundraising success to several competitive advantages, including a differentiated, uncorrelated investment strategy that has continued to deliver robust investment returns through several investment cycles, exit activity that has outpaced the broader market, and consistent deployment in attractive opportunities well-aligned with LLCP's core strengths. LLCP has executed over $4.6 billion of realizations over the past three years through numerous successful sale transactions, including Encore Fire Protection, Tropical Smoothie Cafe, Law Business Research and Hand & Stone.
Matthew Frankel, Managing Partner at LLCP, said, 'We are extremely pleased with the immense support for Fund VII, which reflects considerable trust and strong conviction in LLCP's proven strategy and team. The global investment community recognizes LLCP's ability to generate substantial deployment and realization volume for our limited partners in the current market environment.'
Michael Weinberg, Managing Partner at LLCP, added, 'We are grateful for the continued support and confidence we received from our returning and new limited partners. LLCP's continued success reflects our team's ability to source attractive investment opportunities, partner with talented management teams and build great companies. We look forward to continuing our 41-year track record of success through varying economic environments.'
Fund VII will continue LLCP's successful strategy of investing in market-leading, middle market businesses, with a focus on sectors including franchising, business services, education & training, and engineered products. The Fund has already completed several platform investments – All4, Schülerhilfe and USA Water – and expects to close its fourth platform this month, demonstrating LLCP's ability to execute on attractive opportunities.
Fund VII is nearly one and half times the size of LLCP's previous flagship fund, which closed in 2018 with total capital commitments of $2.5 billion.
About LLCP
Levine Leichtman Capital Partners, LLC is a middle-market private equity firm with a 41-year track record of investing across various targeted sectors, including Business Services, Franchising & Multi-unit, Education & Training and Engineered Products & Manufacturing. LLCP utilizes a differentiated Structured Private Equity investment strategy, combining debt and equity capital investments in portfolio companies. LLCP believes that by investing in a combination of debt and equity securities, it offers management teams growth capital in a highly tailored, flexible investment structure that can be a more attractive alternative than traditional private equity.
LLCP's global team of dedicated investment professionals is led by 9 partners who have worked at LLCP for an average of 19 years. Since inception, LLCP and its affiliates have managed approximately $18.1 billion of capital across nearly 20 investment funds and have invested in approximately 120 portfolio companies. LLCP and its affiliates currently manage $12.7 billion of assets and have offices in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Miami, London, Stockholm, Amsterdam and Frankfurt.
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That gives the stock a free cash flow yield of approximately 10.7%, calculated as $450 million $4.2 billiona figure that speaks directly to the company's ability to return capital while remaining self-funded. When a company is throwing off this much cash relative to its sizeand returning most of it to shareholdersthat's the kind of setup worth paying attention to. It also trades cheaply at 4.2 times EV/EBITDA and only 8.2 times earnings. Now here's the kicker: CRC's proved reserves carry a PV-10 value of $8.9 billion, assuming around $80 Brent crude. That's nearly double the company's current enterprise value. This is what I call a real margin of safety. Even if you haircut the PV-10 by 25% to be conservative, the adjusted asset value still comes in well above the current stock price. And this doesn't account for the carbon business at all. If Carbon TerraVault becomes even a moderately successful carbon sequestration platform, that's hundreds of millions in future earnings being given away for free today. When insiders and seasoned investors make moves, I pay attention. James Chapman, the company's director, has been quietly increasing his stake. And he's not the only one leaning in. Howard Marks (Trades, Portfolio)' Oaktree Capital may have trimmed its stake, but still holds 1.38 million shareshardly a vote of no confidence. Jeremy Grantham (Trades, Portfolio) boosted his position by nearly 38%, now holding 1.22 million shares. Ken Griffin's Citadel ramped up its stake by over 90%, now sitting on 1.16 million shares. And Renaissance Technologies (Trades, Portfolio)? They more than doubled downraising their position by over 185% to more than 590,000 shares. The signal is clear: CRC isn't just cheap. It's attracting the kind of capital that tends to be earlyand usually right. 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With 45Q credits, state incentives, and access to industrial CO? emitters, CRC could end up being one of the most profitable climate infrastructure plays in the countryhidden inside an oil company. Of course, CRC isn't without risk. Oil prices are volatile, and CRC's earnings are sensitive to Brent crude. If prices fall to $50 or below, cash flows will compress. That's the nature of a commodity business. And while the CCS business is promising, it's still early. There's execution risk, regulatory complexity, and market uncertainty. Not every CCS project will succeedor scale profitably. But here's where CRC is different from speculative startups or over-leveraged E&Ps: even without CCS, it's a healthy business. Its existing oil fields, infrastructure, and free cash flow give investors a solid floor. The upside from CCS is just thatupside. The best use of capital is to reinvest at high rates of return. But if you can't do that, you should return it to shareholders. 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