Private equity’s shorter investment period causes headaches

Institutional investors are seeing their investment period with some private equity managers shorten. The time the GP invests in a company until the time they exit is reducing, meaning that investors are getting more cash coming back than forecast in their pacing models.

“For several quarters we’ve been net cash back for our private equity portfolio,” says Vince Smith, chief investment officer and deputy state investment officer at $31 billion New Mexico State Investment Council for the last eleven years. More cash coming back than forecast makes it difficult to hold up the sovereign wealth fund’s recently extended 13 per cent allocation to private equity and keep its weight to the asset class steady. “We are trying to increase our allocation, and in this environment it’s difficult,” he says.

Smith links the trend to the availability of liquidity meaning companies can go public and investors exit quicker than normal. Private equity teams are also turning companies around at a faster pace. “In some cases, they are just fixing the capital structure rather than overhauling company operations.”

Ideally the fund would have raised its private equity allocation to 15 per cent in its latest asset allocation study, but Smith and the team reasoned this would not be achievable in the study’s three-year timeline. The largest component in the private equity allocation is to growth and buy outs.

Venture Capital

Within private equity, venture capital has been the best performer but the allocation is not without its challenges, and Smith expects a tougher climate on the horizon as Central Banks pare back on their liquidity. “VC could run into some trouble,” he predicts. Getting into small VC funds, the best of which are usually closed to new investors  is an enduring challenge. New Mexico’s sovereign fund status has helped open doors that might be closed to underfunded US public pension funds. “Managers seem to favour our perpetual structure; our hand is a bit stronger. We’ve gotten into a couple of good funds,” he says.

Still, he notes that SWFs “the world over” face increasing pressure on their distribution rates. A factor he believes is contributing to SWFs increasingly aggressive growth allocations. “In the past, SWFs tended to have bond portfolios and maybe some real estate. The pressure on distribution rates had led to them wanting more expected returns.”

Sponsored Content

The State Investment Council also uses consultants to help access private equity funds and Smith observes enduringly tough fee negotiations as demand for the asset class continues. Elsewhere he says the fund still needs to pare back on the number of private equity managers and strategies in the portfolio which escaped a fund-wide manager pruning and restructuring in 2015.

New Mexico is also building out its private credit allocation, especially focused on the allocation for two new funds – the Tax Stabilisation Fund and Early Child Education and Care Fund. It has led to a hunt for private credit managers and strategies in an asset class he expects to grow in line with his broader anticipation of an inflection point ahead as central banks withdraw liquidity and reduce bond purchases. “If Central Banks withdraw, liquidity will have to come from the banks. They will have less capital to lend which will require more private capital to step in.”

The private credit allocation will be diversified across geographies and sectors, and he notes that the asset class is not as illiquid as often perceived. “We’ve found more liquidity than we expected when we moved into these markets. You can invest for shorter lock ups and there are quicker turnover periods.” Still, for an investor able to tie up money long- term this can be a double-edged sword. “We can’t always get the illiquidity premium.”

Macro perspective

The entire portfolio is externally managed, leaving New Mexico’s internal investment team of 12 primarily concerned with developing the outlook, strategy, and asset allocation in line with macro views. “Our manager selection is a tool to express those views,” says Smith. He has created a portfolio of standard investments allocated to well-known managers that shies away from complexity. He did away with a 10 per cent allocation to hedge funds and hasn’t integrated a global tactical asset allocation or related products. “Managers are always approaching us with new things, but our acceptance rate is pretty low,” he says.

Crypto: Not even close

He expects low returns going forward but sees light at the end of the tunnel, buoyed particularly by shifting demographics and the growing buying power of Millennials as they move to peak earnings. A tick up in productivity will help fuel growth but could also trigger deflation. It’s why he favours investments that throw off cash like infrastructure and real estate. He has no interest in crypto. “We are not even close yet,” he says, noting with surprise some US public pension fund investment. Houston Firefighters’ Relief and Retirement Fund recently announced that it had made its first investment in Bitcoin and Ethereum.

The portfolio is divided between stocks and bonds (50 per cent) and alternatives (50 per cent) where Smith is still filling out allocations to non-core fixed income and real return, both well below target. Building out the renewable allocation in the real return portfolio has been challenging because of competition, he says.

The allocation to core fixed income amounts to just 10 per cent in a reflection of traditional fixed income’s declining use in the portfolio. “Fixed income should provide income, liquidity and downside protection to stock investments, but it only does one of these things.” Unless there is a big sell off in the stock market, he doesn’t envisage any shift back into public markets.

 

 

Leave a Comment

Investors head back to EM as US tech capex bill mounts

Investors head back to EM as US tech capex bill mounts

US tech mega caps are grappling with surging capital expenditure, casting doubt on whether the premium attached to these stocks in the AI super cycle has become detached from fundamentals. Investors are now turning their attention to emerging markets equities where they have the opportunity to buy into the AI hype at a much lower price.

Sort content by

Tough times greet new CalPERS CIO

Ben Meng isn’t easing into his role. The new CIO of CalPERS faces three new board members, a stressed private equity program and executive turnover, all under the pressure of a 70 per cent funded status and a maturing membership at the $340 billion fund.

Value lies where precious data is stored

Organisations across the globe are collecting data, analysing and re-analysing it more and more every day. As this trend continues, data infrastructure – tangible or intangible – becomes increasingly attractive. Canada’s OPTrust cites this reality as the rationale behind the EdgeCore partnership. It thinks data is its own asset class.

Homogenous behaviour imperils markets

Global markets are more interconnected than ever. That provides many benefits but it also has its drawbacks. Chief among those is the potential for investors to move in lockstep when driven by fear or euphoria, creating feedback loops that can result in crashes.

Northern LGPS forges own pooling path

The UK’s £45 billion Northern LGPS pool has eschewed creating a separate FCA-regulated entity, seeing it as an unnecessary expense. Moves in infrastructure and private equity have also reflected the asset pool’s laser-like focus on keeping costs down.

Managing risk across multiple horizons

Most asset owners have to manage several time frames to be long-term investors but most risk-management tools address only one investment period. A new paper by Focusing Capital on the Long Term attempts to solve this problem by providing a new set of tools.

LUCRF’s member profile drives strategy

Leigh Gavin, CIO at Australian industry-fund pioneer LUCRF Super, takes care to match portfolios and costs with the needs of the fund’s low-balance membership. In recent years, this has meant taking on additional risk and questioning fee models in private equity.

Previous