Do mega private equity funds deliver?

Andrea Auerbach at SRK Headshot Day in Menlo Park, CA

Mega funds are a substantial part of the private investment ecosystem. Defining a private investment fund as one with $10 billion or more in commitments, we calculate that at the end of 2017 mega funds constituted one-third of the estimated $629 billion of dry powder in US private equity and were responsible for one-third of all invested capital from 2014 to 2018.

Because mega funds are the largest pools of capital roaming the investment countryside, so to speak, they have little competition for the deals they want, can get the best advice, access leverage at the most favorable terms, and attract top talent to their firms and their portfolio companies. The result, one might conclude, should be mega returns.

Yet mega-fund returns are more akin to public markets returns than they are to private equity funds of other sizes.

On a three, five, 10, and 12.75-year basis (through September 30, 2018), our analysis shows that global mega funds returned 15.6 per cent, 14.9 per cent, 13.5 per cent and 10.5 per cent respectively, essentially neck and neck with Russell 3000 performance on an mPME basis.

Mega-fund returns are also more than 60 per cent correlated with public indexes, nearly twice the correlation of funds of less than $1 billion in size. Why might this be?

Take a theoretical $20 billion mega fund (which, coincidentally, is greater than the nominal GDP of 74 countries) that, like a typical private equity fund, seeks to build a portfolio of eight to 10 investments over a five-year investment period. The math would imply $2.5 billion per equity investment (perhaps more given the prevalence of co-investment) and, when using market leverage, target companies may need to be at or near $10 billion in enterprise value simply to compel this mega fund to “get out of bed” – to paraphrase supermodel Linda Evangelista.

Sponsored Content

Several companies larger than $20 billion in enterprise value have been acquired by mega funds over the years, with an expectation of more to come.

It is also likely that the mega fund advantages mentioned above helped facilitate these investments in the first place.

But private companies in this size range are shoulder to shoulder with large-cap public equity companies, likely already substantial and globally dominant.

Their scale can make it difficult to effect truly material change that would certainly impact return potential.

Indeed, our analysis indicates the dispersion of global mega fund net internal rates of return from the median to the 5th percentile is 1,043 basis points, roughly one third of the 3,041 basis point dispersion for smaller funds. As an aside, the tighter dispersion also indicates less loss, making mega funds a potentially interesting opportunity this late in the market cycle regardless of their overall return characteristics.

Mega funds are indeed in a category by themselves; a category they are originating and continue to grow into, namely that of a “new public markets proxy.”

Given the increasing prevalence of large-cap private companies that could eventually go public but haven’t yet (and perhaps never will), investors wanting differentiated equity exposure to complement the public equity investments already in their portfolios, passive or otherwise, can increasingly find that exposure from a mega fund.

Our analysis indicates they have essentially bifurcated the private equity arena, offering exposures and returns more akin to public markets than classic private markets. That’s not to say some of the mega funds won’t punch through the returns ceiling and deliver old-school, private-equity returns to their investors but as they continue to amass capital their increasingly larger prey may not make it easy for them.

Andrea Auerbach is head of global private investments research at Cambridge Associates

 

 

Leave a Comment

Iceland’s LV mulls more EM exposures, PE co-investments after SAA review

Iceland’s LV mulls more EM exposures, PE co-investments after SAA review

Iceland’s LV is eyeing more emerging markets allocation and private equity co-investments after conducting an SAA review, which will be finalised in the first half of 2026. CIO Arne Vagn Olsen says the shift is designed to make the $11 billion pension fund future-ready.

Sort content by

Retail investors eye private equity

The efforts to open private markets to retail investors will continue and appear to be progressing. The potential scale of capital is both a blessing and a curse to those who absorb it. The private equity market is already bifurcating, when the retail capital arrives, much of it will likely be deployed into the deep end of the market, with the ultimate result likely being public returns earned privately.

Revolutionising private market reporting

Nearly 10 years ago Lorelei Graye was part of the team at South Carolina that pushed for private market reporting transparency. That experience has motivated her to be a part of the solution in heading up the ADS Initiative to develop global data standards for private capital. We look at the journey to get there.

The bright and dark sides of PE

Analysis of institutional investor private equity allocations shows the differences in implementation styles and related costs are a key driver of a wide dispersion in private equity results. Researchers at CEM Benchmarking show that costs matter, a lot, in PE.

Oregon PE revamp shakes off GFC legacy

Oregon Investment Council has committed to investing $3 billion a year in private equity, with the smooth pacing strategy part a response to the fund’s overweight position to poor performing vintages as a result of its allocations before and after the GFC. The investor is also focusing on manager relationships with a focus on accessing new relationships and upsizing the best existing ones; and a new strategy that sees no provider in charge of more than 5 per cent of the portfolio.

ILPA’s Model LPA sets the standard again

The Institutional Limited Partners Association's new Model Limited Partnership Agreement is beneficial for the industry as well as individual GPs and LPs. Samantha Anders explains.

Future Fund adds risk and liquidity

The Future Fund is adding risk to its portfolio, and focusing on liquidity, as part of a part of an ongoing strategy to free up more capital in the portfolio in the event of a drawdown. It is in the midst of selling off a “large slice” of private equity assets on the secondary market and has bought listed equities in emerging markets in the past year.

Previous