Alt Investments
How "Evergreen" Approach Wins Friends For Private Markets
There appears to be something of a trend towards "perpetual" or "evergreen" fund structures that are designed to surmount some of the obstacles for accessing more traditional forms of private market investing.
Amid all the talk about how to widen access to private market
investing beyond the ranks of big institutions and ultra-wealthy
individuals, a word to keep an ear out for more is
“evergreen.”
The term, a synonym for “perpetual,” relates to how managers of
private equity, credit and other areas are using open-ended funds
that offer monthly or quarterly liquidity, subject to caps.
Advisors particularly like clients' ability to invest monthly
rather than commit episodically based on private market fund
closings – making the process smoother and more
predictable.
This sort of product, produced at scale and well-diversified, is
winning the attention of big institutions, and that sort of
mindset ought to appeal to private clients as well, Simon
Jennings, managing director and head of HarbourVest Partners’
private client group for Europe and Asia, told this news service
in a call. The firm oversees $109.8 billion in assets under
management.
“Private clients should have access to the same quality of
private markets investments as institutional investors,” Jennings
said.
In early July, HarbourVest
Partners, a global private markets firm, announced its
partnership with AP7, a Swedish government pension fund, as a
founder investor in a new private equity strategy. The $835
million anchor investment was made in January this year in a new
open-ended evergreen private equity solution designed for non-US
institutional and high net worth investors.
The strategy does not have capital calls, or “ramp-up” periods of
raising money; there is no “blind pool” where investors commit
capital and then wait for general partners (GPs) to put
capital to work. The “evergreen” model is transparent, relatively
straightforward, and easy to run, Jennings said.
The involvement of a heavy-hitter such as AP7 with HarbourVest is
more than just a vote of confidence – it also shows
individual investors that large and sophisticated players trust
this approach, Jennings continued.
The challenge of illiquidity, and concerns about diversification
have been problems for private clients in the past, even though
they have heard so much about the merits of non-listed
investments, he said. However, about four years ago, the noise
level around “evergreen” funds grew, and awareness of this
approach is rising.
The evergreen model may help square the circle for regulators
seeking ways to widen access to these asset classes without the
worry that people will be caught in illiquid assets which they
don’t understand, and where demands for cash can suddenly spike.
However, Jennings emphasises the importance of ensuring that
evergreen funds are positioned correctly as a medium to long-term
investment and that investors are clearly and responsibly
educated on the liquidity mechanisms, as these vehicles are not
suited to everyone.
In the UK in March, the Financial
Conduct Authority said it had authorised the LTAF structure.
Work continues on tweaking the fine print of how they work and
who can access them. At the heart of the matter is that while
more firms are staying private or de-listing from public markets,
rules about investment suitability for retail clients mean that
areas such as private equity, private credit, and venture
capital, for example, are largely deemed off-limits. In the US,
the Accredited
Investor regime is being tweaked. Jurisdictions such as
Singapore and Hong Kong are pushing their attractions for types
of funds and associated structures, such as Singapore's Variable
Capital Company entities, for example. Some of these changes
dovetail with moves to encourage family offices to set up in
these places,
as in Hong Kong.
Typically, private market funds are only available to large
institutions. There’s often talk in the wealth space about the
need to “democratise” access. However, regulators fear that they
will be criticised if a fund blows up and retail clients are hit,
causing a political storm. Maybe the evergreen model can change
this.
Rise of the “perpetual”
HarbourVest is not the only player in the “perpetual” or
“evergreen” area. Blackstone, the US-listed
group, has outlined its approach here.
Another example is Hamilton Lane, while
others come from firms such as Partners Group, which
operates in a number of regions around the world, and US-based
Andreessen
Horowitz.
For Jennings, his experience of building and leading UBS and
HSBC’s private equity divisions has equipped him to understand
how private clients expect and deserve access to an otherwise
hard-to-enter market. “I have a passion to deliver solutions in
the right way for private clients,” he said.
“In the past, only the large family offices went into private
equity, and then private banks created feeder vehicles that went
into an underlying fund. That worked very well for some private
clients, and they tended to be ultra-high net worth individuals,”
he said.
However, penetration rates [those using private investments] was
probably, overall, only about 5 per cent, he said.
“Illiquidity was a turnoff for clients, and their investments
were not as well diversified as they should be,” Jennings
continued.
The evergreen model will potentially open the door for the
remaining 95 per cent of those investors who aren’t yet at the
private markets party. This is a huge growth opportunity for
managers like us, but we must approach it with care and
integrity, he added.