Alt Investments
Evergreen Funds: Accessing Private Markets' Alpha
The article says that for individual investors, evergreen funds could well serve as a valuable complement to a public equity portfolio.
HarbourVest Partners, a global private markets firm, explains a particular way to expand private markets exposure to different types of investors, both institutional and private investors. Simon Jennings, managing director (pictured) talks about the merits of what are called “evergreen,” or perpetual funds. Such funds, Jennings argues, provide a way for a wider share of the population to access the private markets space, avoiding the challenges of meeting capital calls, and the constraints of a pre-defined exit from a fund.
HarbourVest was interviewed on the topic in early August. And this news service is pleased to share more of HarbourVest's views about this important trend.
To find out more about the firm and get in touch, go to this
link.
The usual editorial disclaimers apply. To respond, email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
Private markets have historically and consistently outperformed
public markets, with time-weighted returns over rolling five-year
periods, showing private equity buyouts generating an
average premium of 670 basis points over the MSCI ACWI Total
Return (1). Yet, investing in private markets has
traditionally been reserved for institutional investors and
ultra-high net worth individuals – investors who are able to meet
the high investment minimums traditionally associated with
private markets.
As regulation evolves and new products are launched, the door to private markets is opening. Structural barriers such as longer-term capital lock up periods that limit liquidity and the complexities and time required to create a private markets portfolio are being removed. More investors can now tap into the potential outperformance and diversification benefits offered by investing in private markets by making a single investment in an evergreen fund.
Read more about why private markets have the potential to provide outsized returns and how evergreen funds are changing the way investors can access this asset class.
Why private markets?
To understand how private markets can provide distinct benefits
to an investor’s portfolio, it is important to consider the ways
in which private markets differ from public markets.
A broader investable universe
When compared with public markets, private markets provide
investors access to a larger and more differentiated opportunity
set comprising a diverse range of companies at varying stages of
development and growth. There are approximately 20 times more
global private equity-backed companies than the companies
included in the MSCI All-Country World Investable Market Index,
the broadest public market index available (2). Globally, there
are nearly 200,000 private equity-backed companies across buyout,
growth equity, and venture investments (3), representing a wide
range of companies from early-stage startups to more mature
companies, along with a wide group of formerly publicly-traded
companies which have decided to return to private ownership.
The ability to invest in a broader investable universe comprising many companies which are at earlier stages of growth, presents an opportunity for outsized returns. The exposure to small and mid-market companies offered by private markets is significant, with median private equity enterprise value projected at $243 million compared with the median public market capitalisation of $2.3 billion (4).
More active engagement
Compared with their public market counterparts, private fund
managers typically follow a more active and engaged approach with
the underlying portfolio companies they acquire. They often have
a controlling interest in the portfolio company and, therefore,
the ability to influence the value creation strategy. The lack of
publicly available information across a much wider investable
universe creates the possibility for significant information
asymmetry, allowing diligent and prudent private market investors
the potential to optimise returns by influencing both the
day-to-day operations and the longer-term value creation strategy
of the portfolio company.
Value creation strategies
Because private fund managers are generally more engaged with
their underlying portfolio companies, investing in private
markets typically seeks to create return premia and potentially
optimise returns for investors in three distinct ways:
Earnings growth
Value derived from operational improvements such as developing
new products, synergistic M&A, and global expansion.
Multiple expansion
Buying smaller and/or public companies going through a tough time
at a lower valuation and selling them at a higher multiple.
Debt reduction
Optimising the capital structure by adding and removing leverage
effectively.
Risk/return benefits
While the broader macroeconomic environment influences private
assets in a similar manner to public markets, as shown in the
chart below, private equity (both buyout and venture) has
historically generated meaningfully higher time-weighted returns
and exhibited lower downside risk across all three time periods
compared with public markets (MSCI ACWI). This dynamic is
driven by a combination of active ownership which can provide
support to portfolio companies in challenging markets, a
preference for resilient businesses, and less reactive private
markets valuations. Combining the potential for higher
returns and lower downside risk, private equity can generate
better risk-adjusted returns and provide diversification to an
investor’s portfolio.
Accessing private markets via evergreen
funds
Evergreen funds provide investors with a number of benefits when
investing in private markets, as outlined below.
Immediate diversification
A private markets' investment programme should be diversified
across several dimensions including sector, geography, vintage
year, and strategy. Evergreen funds often invest in more than one
private markets' strategy (secondary investments, direct
co-investments, primary investments, etc.) and can provide
diversification across a range of geographies and vintages,
offering investors access to an established private markets'
portfolio with a single subscription. Investing in an evergreen
fund can remove the operational complexities associated with
building a well-diversified and resilient private markets'
portfolio “from scratch.”
J-curve mitigation
Private markets' investors often experience what is commonly
referred to as the “J-curve” effect, or negative returns early in
a traditional private fund’s life that become positive over time
– giving the appearance of the letter J on a performance graph.
Practically speaking, after an initial investment is made,
portfolio performance is negative as capital is injected into the
business without initial gain in value. Over time, and as
investors continue to fund the commitment, gains begin to
accumulate on the paid-in amount and investors can begin to
harvest the gains by selling and realising interests once the
total value of the investment is greater than the initial
commitment. Investing in an established evergreen fund can
mitigate the impact of the negative side of the J-curve and
remove the cash drag of a typical 10 to 14-year closed-end
private equity drawdown structure where early negative returns
can weigh on performance early in the life of a private markets'
commitment.
Manager access
There is a wide dispersion of returns across the private markets'
manager universe, and access to many of the top quartile managers
can be challenging. Top GPs, particularly within venture capital,
are often oversubscribed and only grant allocations to investors
with whom they have long-standing relationships. Furthermore,
there can be significant upfront capital requirements to access
top private equity managers during pre-set fundraising periods.
Through a multi-manager or open-architecture approach, evergreen
funds can provide investors access to multiple GPs in one
investment. This can significantly reduce the time and research
spent in having to find the best managers in each sub-investment
class.
Snapshot comparison: Traditional private equity versus
evergreen funds
With the evergreen market evolving quickly, there are many
different options for new and existing investors to consider.
Whether a single-manager or multi-manager product, and no matter
the desired investment objective, we believe that proper
execution of an evergreen strategy can accelerate outcomes for
investors of all types. Thus, understanding evergreen fund
product specifications and provider capabilities are crucial
considerations for potential investors.
Evergreen funds are pioneering a new way to access private market returns. These funds seek to offer investors instant exposure to a diversified private markets portfolio in a single subscription with lower investment minimums, potential for enhanced liquidity, greater flexibility to meet investment objectives, and less operational complexity compared with traditional private markets' investing.
For individual investors, evergreen funds could well serve as a valuable complement to a public equity portfolio, an enhancement to an existing closed-end private markets' portfolio, or as an access point for investors new to private markets who wish to enhance risk-adjusted returns while preserving an option for liquidity if their personal circumstances change. Evergreen funds could also be used as a satellite liquidity solution for experienced institutional investors with a mature portfolio of closed-end traditional private equity funds seeking to adjust exposure back to a targeted strategic asset allocation level. Either way, evergreen funds are opening the door to private markets' investing, offering both new and existing investors access to potential outperformance and diversification benefits.
Footnote:
1, MSCI data as of 30 June 2023. Calculated as the average
spread of rolling five-year time-weighted global buyout funds
return over rolling five-year MSCI ACWI total return. 31 December
2001 to 30 June 2023. Past performance is not a reliable
indicator of future results.
2, Pitchbook, data as of 2 February 2024, and MSCI data
as of 31 December 2023. Private markets
comprising buyout, growth equity, and venture capital
companies. Public market comprising all constituents in the MSCI
All-Country IMI Index.
3, Pitchbook, data as of 2 February 2024.
4, Pitchbook and MSCI data as of 30 September 2023. PE
backed companies include buyout, growth, and venture. Median PE
enterprise value is defined as the sum of the absolute
differences between private/public sector exposures for PE-backed
deals invested for the period 2018 to 2022.
Disclosure
HarbourVest Partners, LLC is a registered investment advisor under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. This material is solely for informational purposes and should not be viewed as a current or past recommendation or an offer to sell or the solicitation to buy securities or adopt any investment strategy. The opinions expressed herein represent the current, good faith views of the author(s) at the time of publication, are not definitive investment advice, and should not be relied upon as such. This material has been developed internally and/or obtained from sources believed to be reliable; however, HarbourVest does not guarantee the accuracy, adequacy, or completeness of such information. There is no assurance that any events or projections will occur, and outcomes may be significantly different than the opinions shown here. This information, including any projections concerning financial market performance, is based on current market conditions, which will fluctuate and may be superseded by subsequent market events or for other reasons.The information contained herein must be kept strictly confidential and may not be reproduced or redistributed in any format without the express written approval of HarbourVest.