Alt Investments
Private Market Secondaries Trend Takes Italian Turn

The move is yet another example of how the market for "secondaries" funds continues to gain ground, along with structures carrying an "evergreen" format.
Coller Capital, the UK-headquartered private market secondaries business which is being bought by Sweden’s EQT, has entered a distribution pact with Italy’s Mediobanca Private Banking. Under the partnership, the Coller Equity Feeder (“CollerEquity”) fund is being exclusively offered to high net worth and ultra-HNW clients in Italy.
CollerEquity sits within Coller Capital’s $4 billion evergreen
platform which provides institutional and professional investors
with access to Coller Capital’s secondaries investment
expertise.
Mediobanca Private Banking’s bankers will be supported by
Coller’s private wealth secondaries solutions (PWSS) team,
including Jonathan Aiach and Claudio Caruso, who are dedicated to
the Italian market.
“Mediobanca has long led the way in bringing high quality private
markets opportunities to Italian qualified investors. We are
pleased to join forces to expand access to institutional grade
private equity secondaries across the wealth channel,” Jake
Elmhirst, partner, head of private wealth secondaries solutions
and head of capital formation at Coller Capital, said in a
statement.
The drive comes as Mediobanca's own activities have made
headlines. Inn February, Italy’s Banca Monte dei Paschi di
Siena (BMPS) said it took full control of Milan-headquartered
Mediobanca, delisted it, while preserving its brand. Mediobanca
has a substantial private banking arm, including Monaco’s CMB.
(In February 2008, Mediobanca acquired Unicredit’s private
banking activities in Monaco through CMB. The deal followed the
acquisition of ABN AMRO’s branch in the principality in November
2006.)
Greta Teot, executive director and head of private markets at
Mediobanca Private Banking, added: “Secondary strategies have
evolved from a tactical allocation within private investors’
portfolios into a core strategic component, supported by the
structural expansion and increasing sophistication of the market.
The evergreen structure further enhances these intrinsic
advantages, enabling investors to access diversification,
visibility and cash flow dynamics in a more efficient way.”
Coller Capital, founded in 1990, has become one of the more
prominent players in the secondaries space – the business of
buying pre-exiting private market investments, enabling investors
in closed-ended funds to liquidate their stakes ahead of the
usual end date. This liquidity option has grown more popular as
the private markets sector has matured. (See an interview with
Coller Capital and coverage of its build-out
here.) There is a great deal of headroom for growth. In the
primary market, for example, there is an estimated $11 trillion
of unrealised net asset value inside private equity firms
globally; Coller has said that this market could reach $500
billion in transaction volume by 2030.
This publication also recently examined the area of “evergreen”
(open-ended) funds and how prepared this sector might be for a
sustained economic downturn – see stories
here and
here.