Alternative PE vehicles underperform

Co-investment, and other alternative private equity vehicles, underperform a manager’s associated main fund, a new paper by leading private equity academics Josh Lerner and Antoinette Schoar shows.

The paper, co-authored by Harvard’s Lerner, Schoar from MIT, and Nan Zhang and Jason Mao from State Street Global Exchange, examines the performance of alternative vehicles, such as direct investing and co-investments, for the first time.

The research found that, on average, co-investment private equity vehicles underperform a general partner’s (GP) main fund; however, there is a twist. The paper also found that limited partners (LP) with better past performance invest in alternative vehicles that have above-average market performance. In fact, the performance of co-investment vehicles for those investors outperforms even the GP’s main fund.

In other words, if you’re an investor with access to high-performing GPs, it’s worthwhile to invest in a co-investment vehicle. For everyone else, it’s not worth it.

“When comparing the performance of alternative vehicles to those of the main funds raised by the same private capital group in the same year (or in the five years prior), we see that on average the alternative vehicles underperform their associated main funds,” the paper, Investing Outside The Box, states.

In an interview with top1000funds.com, Lerner, who is the Jacob H. Schiff Professor of Investment Banking at Harvard Business School, said the same funds that were good at choosing private equity funds (and managers) were also good at choosing alternative vehicles, and outperforming the associated main fund.

Sponsored Content

“Those that do it well show it’s worth doing,” Lerner says. “This supports early work that Antoinette and I did that highlighted that not all LPs are created equal.

“If you take the conclusions of this paper seriously, then doubling down on choosing the right funds to invest in is the winning strategy for investing in private equity, rather than investing in alternative vehicles”, with the exception of LPs that are proven to be very good fund-pickers.

The good news is Lerner’s observation that LPs often learn from their investments in private equity, resulting in improved performance.

“There is evidence that LPs have a general pattern of increasing performance over time,” he says. “Trial and error really matters. One thing that has impressed me about the leading LPs is their experience really comes to bear. A lot of it is pattern recognition and inference from stuff they have seen before and where the warning signs are.

“A lot of the LPs that are good often have people who have been in the industry for a while and worked together for a while so are good at the softer things. This is definitely an area where LPs can get better.”

The allocation to alternative vehicles has grown from 7 per cent of private equity capital commitments in the 1980s to 24 per cent in the 2010s.

Of the 108 investors in the research sample that allocated to private equity, only four did not use any alternative vehicles.

The paper also shows that investment in alternative vehicles could be the result of a bargaining process between a set of very different GPs and LPs.

Why it happens

Lerner says there are potentially several different stories as to why there is disparity in performance.

“When do GPs need help filling out their dance card? It’s usually in situations where they are putting a lot of money to work, so in big deals or at market peaks. I’ve said before, if an investor wants to be successful in private equity, avoiding the times where money is being put to work is a good strategy,” he says.

Lerner says it is also possible that investors are choosing alternative vehicles at the wrong time.

“Alternative vehicles might be the only thing an LP can get access to at a quantity they want,” he explains.

He also says perhaps the LPs view the GP as sufficiently good that the alternative vehicles are “good enough”, compared with other funds in which the LP could invest.

Another reason might be that the decision to employ co-investment is a portfolio management decision and discretionary deals are a way of getting a particular exposure.

Or maybe LPs just view doing direct deals as more interesting and intellectually challenging.

“We can say that most literature suggests private equity is not a cheap asset class so the desire of LPs to get a better deal is understandable,” Lerner says.

But there is a huge disparity of returns in private equity, so while an investor might be getting a discount, it could be on an investment that underperforms.

 

To access the paper click here: Investing Outside The Box

Other stories related to this research include:

Private equity persistence slips

Asset owners rethink private equity

 

 

 

 

Leave a Comment

Nest favours institutional-first managers as retail exodus pressures private credit

Nest favours institutional-first managers as retail exodus pressures private credit

Nest, the largest workplace pension in the UK, says that private credit managers who prioritise institutional clients will be more favourably viewed. The £61 billion ($82 billion) fund has awarded a £450 million ($605 million) US direct lending mandate to Crescent Capital this month, citing the manager's institutional-client-first approach as a key attraction.

Sort content by

Pension funds and social housing: a perfect match?

Pension funds and social housing: it looks like a perfect match as schemes in the United Kingdom seek long-term, index-linked cash flows and housing associations, the not-for-profit providers of this type of affordable housing for low income households, hunt the long-term finance they can’t access via banks. Broad residential housing represents just 1 per cent

Learning from Danish funds’ stable alternative

Despite upturns in equity and bond prices sending 2012 returns into double digits at many large Danish funds, it appears that successfully implementing infrastructure initiatives remains the holy grail of Danish institutional investing. Instead of merely basking in 12.9-per-cent annual returns, Industriens Pension, for instance, used its 2012 results announcement to make a commitment to

Who should co-invest in private equity?

Some pension funds have hit on a lucrative strategy to extract more value from their private equity portfolios. The £34-billion ($51.6-billion) Universities Superannuation Scheme, the United Kingdom’s second biggest pension fund for university and higher education staff, is expanding a private equity co-investment strategy begun in 2008. It’s a model whereby schemes portion some investment

Norway’s GPFG enters the property game

Last May, when Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global bought 4 per cent of the Formula One motor racing group from private-equity firm CVC Capital Partners, its goal was clear. The sovereign wealth fund, which invests Norway’s oil revenues, wanted the inside track on Formula One’s IPO in Singapore, scheduled for June. Instead, the GPFG’s foray

Investors add to credit cycle

Reaching-for-yield — the propensity to buy riskier assets in order to achieve higher yields — is believed to be an important factor contributing to the credit cycle. This Harvard Business School finance working paper analyses this phenomenon in the corporate bond market. The paper’s authors Bo Becker and Victoria Ivashina show evidence for reaching for

Gunning for diversity, dynamism and due diligence

The new low-return, high-volatility environment requires broadly diversified portfolios, dynamic decision-making and rigorous due diligence, which is beyond the internal capacity of most small funds under $10 billion, warns Russell Investment’s global chief investment officer Peter Gunning. He says smaller funds must decide if it is cost effective and even possible to internally manage investment

Previous