Machine Learning and GPT-3: Applications for Private Equity

Trident
5 min readAug 11, 2020
Photo by Kevin Ku on Unsplash

At Trident, a large part of our strategy to support independent sponsors and invest in small businesses is to apply state of the art technology to the private equity investment process. We use a combination of proprietary and third-party software to make the due diligence, communication, and investment process more efficient. Look out for future posts on more detail and perspectives on how we are iterating on and developing our systems.

One area of interest at Trident is the application of artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) to various aspects of the investment process. Applications of AI/ML to public market investing has been well documented, but there is far less discussion on its use in private markets. There are a variety of reasons for this, but a major one is access to data. ML systems are best applied to situations where there are repeatable patterns and where enough data is available to uncover those patterns. Although the existence of repeatable patterns is less certain, there is definitely more data available for public market investing than private market investing.

Applying ML to the PE Process

The lack of large financial datasets in private equity may be a barrier for the application of ML to the investing process, but there are many other areas of the due diligence process where it can be applied. One way to think of the private equity due diligence process is as an iterative stepwise process. The investment team develops questions that need to be answered about a specific opportunity. To answer those questions the team then aggregates various data, analyses that data, and then evaluates it. This often leads to a new set of more specific and detailed questions and the cycle continues.

A typical private equity due diligence process cycle

The data aggregation and analysis steps both lend themselves well to application of machine learning. Often this work requires cobbling together data points from spreadsheets, PDFs, PowerPoint decks, internet searches, and all kinds of other data sources. Analyzing and interpreting documents is an area where ML has made great strides in recent years. Recently one of the most exciting developments has been the release of Open AI’s GPT-3 language generator.

GPT-3 and Private Equity

The GPT-3 language generator is a pre-trained machine learning model that can interpret text and generate new text in a similar style. As mentioned above, training an ML model requires a large dataset that contains repeatable patterns. A common shortcut to building a model for a specific application is to use a pre-trained model that solves for something more generic and fine tune it. GPT-3 is an example of this. If you want to develop a ML model that generates poetry, for example, it might help to start with a model that has already been trained to interpret the english language. GPT-3 follows this example, but to the extreme. It has been pre-trained on a staggering amount of examples of writing. It’s over 100 times larger than the previous version GPT-2 and orders of magnitude larger than any other such model.

Open AI has already given access to GPT-3 to several people to experiment with it. Using only a bit of additional training, people have been able to have the model generate everything from podcast scripts to website code using plain english descriptions. Although these are more proof-of-concept than working software, I wanted to highlight some of the ways this cutting edge technology can be applied to the private equity process.

Legal Documents

One project converted complicated legal language in term sheets and contracts in summarized plain english.

https://twitter.com/michaeltefula/status/1285505897108832257

Private equity involves a lot of contract writing whether it be NDAs during diligence, operating agreements, or acquisition documents. Technology like this could allow lawyers to spend more time focussing on the substance of documents rather than creation of documents themselves, which could also result in lower deal fees.

Financial Statements and Accounts

In the following project, the system was able to convert financial statements into plain english quarterly and annual reports.

https://twitter.com/moesalih_/status/1288554452488790019

In this example, the system created accounting entries based on plain english descriptions of expenses.

https://twitter.com/itsyashdani/status/1285695850300219392

The interpretation of financial statements into plain english and vice versa can be a time consuming aspect of the diligence process. Having automated systems extract or create meaningful prose could save the investment team time so that they can focus on evaluating investments.

Reporting

The last example is a project that uses plain english to create PowerPoint slides.

https://twitter.com/nutanc/status/1288517555754110977

Creating materials for LPs, investors, and others to communicate the evaluation of an investment is another time intensive process. Making that process simple and easier to complete also makes the diligence process more efficient.

These are just some of the ways cutting edge AI can be applied to the private equity process. Each of these cases is about augmenting the investment team so they can spend the majority of their time on investment evaluation and less time on the pedantic work of the process. Implementing these kinds of solutions “in production” is a long way off, but give a glimpse into the way we at Trident see the future of private equity investing. To learn more visit us at www.trident.co.

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Trident

Trident invests institutional equity capital in independent sponsors acquiring US-based businesses. https://www.trident.co