If good pain exists, private markets are feeling it

This article was published in partnership with Blue Owl Capital.

This article was published in partnership with Blue Owl Capital.

After a formative, largely unsupervised childhood, private markets are finally adulting, which reflects the growing size and importance of the sector, writes James Clarke, senior managing director – global head of institutional capital at Blue Owl Capital.

Private asset managers are facing increased scrutiny and pressure from institutional clients to deliver value and it’s about time.

Those of us who grew up in public markets, and those who are still there, have had many nightmares about being hauled into a client’s office and fired over a dip in performance.

By comparison, private asset managers have enjoyed relative peace and harmony.

Finally, their sleep is being disturbed. As private market managers grow organically and through M&A, shed their boutique image, and morph into giant investment management platforms, they are being held to the same standards as their public market counterparts. No one is exempt from the firing line.

Sponsored Content

This is a positive development that reflects the size, scale and maturation of private markets, and the increasingly important role they play in portfolios.

They are no longer investment management’s poor cousin, accounting for around 30 of institutional portfolios. This compares to around 10 per cent a couple of decades ago.

Another positive development is that private asset managers are being judged not only against their peers but against other asset classes.

Until recently, they have largely managed to escape comparison, due to the disparity of strategies and returns, their lack of liquidity and transparency, and the absence of standardised reporting.

Ironically, this shift from absolute to relative performance creates a more even playing field, recognising that everything and everyone should be judged on their risk-return profile.

When it comes to performance, private assets are currently holding their own, and this is expected to continue, but greater scrutiny and comparison can only be a good thing for investors and members.

Arguably, the most telling signs that private markets are growing up is that investing in the sector has moved from being a tactical asset allocation decision to a strategic asset allocation decision, across all private asset types.

Furthermore, private assets are not just a capital appreciation play but a capital preservation and income generation strategy.

One example and where the shift from TAA to SAA is most evident is in direct lending, where global private credit assets under management have quadrupled to $2.1 trillion in the past decade.

With the banks retreating from segments of the lending market due to regulatory capital constraints and risk appetite changes, and more people entering retirement, demand for global private credit has led to an exponentially bigger opportunity set.

As a result, private credit has become a key part of most institutional investors’ defensive portfolios. Not only can it add resilience and diversification benefits, but it can also be a strong source of income.

This is a meaningful change, given that not that long ago allocations to private credit were small and funded by a portfolio’s alternatives bucket. At times, if credit spreads were tight or the market appeared distressed, funds could make tactical moves to adjust their allocation.

As more members start drawing a pension, and the amount of money leaving superannuation and pension funds begins to eclipse contributions, private credit and other private market asset classes will become more essential for delivering long-term income and stability.

All these shifts and changes point to an asset class that is growing and maturing. Taking a total portfolio approach, public and private markets both have a critical role to play in serving the needs of investors.

Leave a Comment

Why Asian equities’ growth will outlast the AI-driven semiconductor cycle

Why Asian equities’ growth will outlast the AI-driven semiconductor cycle

In the latest episode of the Fiduciary Investors Series, Liao spoke with Top1000funds.com Asia Pacific correspondent Darcy Song on why the convergence of innovation, demographics and improving shareholder returns makes Asian equities an increasingly compelling diversification trade for asset owners navigating a geopolitically fractured world.

Sort content by

When factors disagree

Generic strategies designed to harvest a certain factor premium regularly conflict with other factor premiums. We find that the premiums associated with these strategies tend to shrink, sometimes even to zero, in these periods of factor disagreement. Enhanced factor strategies, on the contrary, are explicitly designed to avoid stocks that are unattractive on other established

Factor investing, why implementation is important

Factor investing is becoming more popular. Professional investors are increasingly considering investing strategically in certain parts of the financial market which realize better risk-adjusted returns over longer periods. The question is: “How can investors best implement this strategy?”. Read the full article.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Why not all low volatility stocks are equal

Low-volatility investing is becoming more popular. Many professional investors currently explicitly allocate a significant portion of their portfolio to low-volatility stocks. Robeco uses an enhanced approach to increase returns and reduce risk. Read the full article.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

A ‘Sharper’ approach to factor premiums

There is a shift towards allocating to the factor premiums momentum, value and low volatility. However, since common factor indexes are a suboptimal way to harvest factor premiums, this paper shows the improved results of a more sophisticated approach. Factor strategies developed by Robeco lead to higher returns, while lowering the risks, resulting in higher

How smart is ‘smart beta’ investing?

Investors increasingly embrace “smart beta” investing, by which we mean passively following an index in which stock weights are not proportional to their market capitalizations, but based on some alternative weighting scheme. Examples include fundamentally-weighted indices and minimum-volatility indices. In this whitepaper we first take a critical look at the pros and cons of smart

Hermes EOS Q3 13 Public Report

Too many companies are unprepared for the growing threat of a cyber attack. Investors have a role to play in ensuring this risk is firmly on the agenda.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous