Alt Investments
Private Equity Investor Initiative Wins More Industry Backing

The group, described as a "member-driven organization dedicated exclusively to advancing the interests of private equity limited partners", has won a raft of new endorsements from major investment houses.
A raft of new investment houses have endorse a US-based industry
lobby and netowrking group pushing for more clarity on
the fees, and performance of private equity, a sector
sometimes hobbled by lack of data.
Some 15 months after the Institutional Limited Partners
Association published the first private equity industry standard
“template” for reporting fees, expenses and carried interest to
limited partners, the organization yesterday said fresh
endorsements for its template have come from groups including
Ares Management, Bridgepoint, Employees Retirement System of
Texas, Lockheed Martin Investment Management Company, Oaktree
Capital Management, Permira, Searchlight Capital Partners and
Riverstone.
The organization's offices are in Washington DC and Toronto,
Canada. Its membership is global with LPs in Europe, North
and South America, Asia, Africa and Australia.
"Following a successful year of template adoption by the global
private equity community, the time is right to expand beyond the
impressive base of users and support those LPs [investors] who
seek enhanced transparency but have yet to implement for a
variety of reasons," Peter Freire, chief executive of the ILPA,
said. "We now have experienced LP and GP adopters, as well
as fund administrators and technology partners, all at the ready
to assist others so all may enjoy the benefits of using the
industry standard,” he said.
A
recent conference hosted by Family Wealth Report in
New York heard that an issue for the private equity industry, and
its investors, has been a lack of clear, consistent measures of
how well such investments fare, fees, and other
variables.
The second phase of the ILPA plan involves initiatives this year,
including making use of existing template users' experiences to
identify best practices for implementation, including raising
awareness of the range of solutions from technology providers and
fund administrators; creating "Communities of Practice" to
exchange perspectives of reporting professionals using the
template and provide recommendations for further development and
support, and providing new guidance on how data is overseen.
Scott Evans, deputy comptroller-asset management and chief
investment officer for New York City, said the reporting template
has benefited his team and the wider industry. "We view the ILPA
Reporting Template as the best standard for collecting fee and
expense data for private market funds and a crucial step towards
automation in the industry. Mandating the completion of these
templates from all of our private market GPs has improved the
transparency of fees and expenses, and allowed the New York City
Office of the Comptroller's Bureau of Asset Management to better
assess all fees and expenses from our GP relationships. Having
the information in a standardized format has fostered a higher
level of transparency for our staff and Trustees, and saved
considerable time and effort."
The ILPA describes itself as a global organization.