Carlyle's Bet on Telecom in Hawaii Ends Badly

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Hawaiian Telcom Communications filed for bankruptcy protection Monday, a black eye for buyout firm Carlyle Group and another blow to the reeling world of private-equity investing. Carlyle bought Hawaii's largest telephone carrier from Verizon in 2005 for $1.6 billion, putting up $425 million in equity and using debt to finance the rest. Carlyle stocked the board with a team of telecom experts, including William Kennard, former chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, and former Nextel Communications Inc. Chief Executive Daniel Akerson. But the private-equity firm faced problems from the start. State utility regulators delayed the deal's closing. And billing and customer-service issues plagued Hawaiian Telcom as it created back-office systems from scratch. That spurred customers to drop service for wireless and cable providers.


Carlyle's Bet on Telecom in Hawaii Ends Badly Carlyle Takes Another Hit As Telecom Firm Goes Under (Washington Post)