Alt Investments
Always Be Allocating: It's Important To Blend Vintages
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This guest article continues to look at the investment issues around alternative assets such as private equity.
The following article continues this news service’s series looking at alternative investments. The comments, about private equity and the asset class’s importance, are by Kunal Shah, head of private equity solutions, iCapital Network, and Tatiana Esipovich, AVP, research and due diligence, at the same firm. iCapital is a tech platform for the alternative investment sector.
The editors are pleased to share these views with readers and invite responses. This publication doesn’t necessarily endorse all comments from guest writers. Email the editor at tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com and jackie.bennion@clearviewpublishing.com
In wine production, prevailing conditions during the growing season influence vintage quality. Similarly, prevailing market conditions can impact private equity results.
A private equity fund’s “vintage” year, typically the year in which it makes its first investment, effectively starts the clock on the 10-year term of a typical fund. While volatility is not as dramatic in private markets as it is in the public markets, private markets are also subject to cycles. Funds of a certain vintage may benefit from investing into a low-valuation environment and a corresponding ability to ride an economic recovery. Other vintages may have the ill fortune of deploying most of their capital right before a market crash. Investors can help mitigate the impact of vintage performance volatility by allocating across multiple vintages and selecting high-quality investment managers.
  Vintage performance is hard to predict
  As most would acknowledge, attempting to forecast market
  conditions over a prolonged period is a futile exercise.
  Moreover, private equity fund lives are split into an investment
  period that typically lasts five years and a subsequent
  harvesting period, when the exit environment becomes more
  relevant. The fact that private equity fund investments are not
  made in one lump sum, but rather the committed capital is
  deployed over several years, gives managers a fair amount of
  flexibility to time their entry and exit points. This makes it
  impossible to predict the predominant investment environment for
  a given fund. 
For a sharpshooting, vintage-timing approach to be successful, one would have to know in advance not just which multi-year period will present the most favorable investment environment for a given strategy, but that the selected manager will, in fact, deploy the majority of their capital during that concentrated period. In other words, trying to cherry pick vintage years for private equity would require exceptional market foresight and macro timing.
To provide an example, one might assume that buyout and venture capital funds would tend to perform similarly across cycles. In fact, as shown in Figure 1, buyout and venture capital returns have exhibited meaningful counter-cyclicality, despite both being equity oriented. Timing the markets in the context of performing fundamental analysis on individual, liquid stocks is difficult enough. Given the nature of private equity fund investing, a vintage selection approach that attempts to predict both market conditions and the performance of specific strategies far into the future has a slim chance of consistent success. This underscores the basic need to construct private equity allocations that are diversified by manager, strategy, and vintage.
  Figure 1: Vintage Year Returns Typically Have Low
  Correlations with Market Cycles 
  Median Annual Internal Rate of Return, Private Equity and Venture
  Capital
  
   
  For illustrative and informative purposes only. Source:
  Preqin All PE and VC benchmarks, as of December 31,
  2018.
  Too much dry powder?
  When looking at the private equity market today, we occasionally
  receive questions about whether continued strong performance is
  feasible given the amount of capital private markets have
  attracted. While it’s true that the capital available to deploy
  stands at a record $690 billion for buyouts today, that level of
  dry powder is relatively low when viewed as a percentage of total
  global private equity AUM. In 2018, dry powder represented only
  35 per cent of overall AuM compared with the early-mid 2000s,
  when that percentage ranged from 43 per cent to 48 per cent (1).
  What’s more, the shrinking of the public markets and concurrent
  growth in the number of private companies has provided ample
  opportunities for the industry to cycle through its capital in a
  healthy way. Dry powder is just one piece of investing puzzle in
  private equity, and investors who choose to avoid investing in
  private equity due to rising dry powder are likely missing out on
  an opportunity to invest in a growing set of companies who prefer
  to remain private. As the chart below shows, the US middle
  market, which is largely private, tends to grow at a faster rate
  than public markets.
Figure 2: US Middle Market Tends to Grow Faster
  
   
  For illustrative and informative purposes only. Source:
  Bloomberg and Golub Capital. Note: Golub Capital Altman Index
  (GCAI) is based on aggregated data from companies in the loan
  portfolio of Golub Capital, a leading middle market
  lender. 
  High-quality managers can perform well in any
  market
  When it comes to private equity performance, manager selection is
  essential. Effective private equity investors typically find that
  the best strategy is to focus on finding experienced managers who
  can take advantage of favorable investment conditions when they
  occur (effectively, buying low, selling higher, and taking
  advantage of secular growth along the way). It is also important
  that these managers have the networks, discipline, and industry
  expertise to avoid overpaying in frothy markets, develop and
  execute clear value creation plans at portfolio companies, and
  identify the most accretive selling opportunities in any given
  market environment.
  The importance of peer comparison
  A superior winery tends to produce a better product on average
  across vintages. Similarly, experienced, talented private equity
  managers demonstrate the ability to consistently add value in
  both bull and bear markets. Separating these superior managers
  from the pack requires comparing their returns with those of
  other funds of comparable size and strategy in the same vintage
  year. It also requires parsing out how much of the return was
  generated by multiple expansion, versus by revenue and EBITDA
  growth in their underlying portfolio companies (a strong proxy
  for private equity alpha, particularly in down markets). As shown
  in Figure 3, the spread between private equity beta and the asset
  class’ top-performing funds can exceed 1,000 basis points.
Figure 3: Private Equity’s High Interquartile Spread Emphasizes the Importance of Manager Selection
  
   
  For illustrative purposes only. Sources: Lipper, NCREIF,
  Cambridge Associates, HFRI, JP Morgan Asset Management. Global
  equities (large cap) and global bonds dispersion are based on the
  world large stock and world bond categories, respectively.
  Manager dispersion is based on 2013–2018 annual returns for
  global equities, global bonds, US core real estate and hedge
  funds. US non-core real estate, US private equity and US. venture
  capital are represented by the 5-year horizon internal rate of
  return (IRR). Data is as of December 31, 2018.
  Consider a vintage diversification program
  In sum, manager selection in private equity is far more important
  than vintage selection and has the added virtue of being a
  feasible exercise. Further, successful private equity investors
  tend to commit capital not just to top-quartile managers but
  across vintage years. A steady allocation pace across vintages
  adds critical diversification both within private equity
  allocations and in the context of the broader portfolio.
  Allocating across vintages also allows an investor to build out a
  systematic private equity program that eventually becomes
  self-funding by producing a distribution stream that can be
  reinvested (or distributed as income). 
Investors seeking to build a diversified private equity allocation may wish to consider a vintage investing program constructed with vintage-specific, multi-manager funds. These funds typically provide access to carefully vetted private equity funds within a single vintage year. By including multiple vintage year funds in a private equity allocation, investors can gain diversified sector and vintage exposure, often at lower investment minimums.
  END NOTES 
  1. Source: Preqin, as of December 31, 2018.
  IMPORTANT INFORMATION
  This material is provided for informational purposes only and is
  not intended as, and may not be relied on in any manner as legal,
  tax or investment advice, a recommendation, or as an offer to
  sell, a solicitation of an offer to purchase or a recommendation
  of any interest in any fund or security offered by iCapital. Past
  performance is not indicative of future results. Alternative
  investments are complex, speculative investment vehicles and are
  not suitable for all investors. An investment in an alternative
  investment entails a high degree of risk and no assurance can be
  given that any alternative investment fund’s investment
  objectives will be achieved or that investors will receive a
  return of their capital. The information contained herein is
  subject to change and is also incomplete. This industry
  information and its importance is an opinion only and should not
  be relied upon as the only important information available.
  Information contained herein has been obtained from sources
  believed to be reliable, but not guaranteed. Securities may be
  offered through iCapital Securities, LLC, a registered broker
  dealer, member of FINRA and SIPC and subsidiary of Institutional
  Capital Network, Inc. All rights reserved.