Alt Investments
Private Markets, Direct Investing And Supply Chains – In Conversation With Leon Capital Group

Almost a year on since Leon Capital Group hooked up with New York-headquartered tech platform iCapital that is focused on alternative investments, we talk to Leon's founder and chief executive about trends playing out.
In August 2024, Leon Capital
Group, a family office, which oversees $10 billion of private
capital, said
it was collaborating with iCapital, the New
York-headquartered tech platform that has been one of the most
prominent names opening access to alternative investments such as
private equity.
As this article
this week from US correspondent Charles Paikert
notes, the level of activity around this “access” story is
now significant. Interest in hedge funds, venture capital,
private equity, private credit, real estate and other
non-publicly traded vehicles has never been higher, and Wall
Street’s major asset managers are rapidly rolling out and
promoting alternative products. But as the article notes, a
skeptical tone is also evident. In the past, there has been
concern about the
"hype" element.
FWR recently caught up with Fernando De Leon, founder
and CEO of Leon Capital Group, to ask him about trends and the
state of the market.
FWR: RIAs, multi-family offices and others in
the wealth sector are being regaled, a lot, about the virtues of
private equity, private credit, venture capital, infrastructure,
property, etc. What is holding advisors and clients back from
doing more?
De Leon: Historically there was hesitation
amongst the advisor community that saw alternative Investments as
more risk than reward, partially reinforced by a lack of
transparency and liquidity. The alternatives industry has done a
great job creating investment vehicles with more pricing
transparency and liquidity optionality. But currently, there are
substantially less exits from prior fund vintages, so return of
capital (DPI) has stalled, and advisors and limited partners
generally have throttled back capital commitments.
FWR: Is there a risk that the alternatives story
is getting overhyped? What happens if there is a significant
financial/economic downturn? Are clients’ expectations suitably
ready? If not, what needs to be done?
De Leon: There are over 5,000 investment
management firms, and each of them manages on average three
funds, so we’re already seeing regression to the mean from the
proliferation of fund vehicles pursuing overlapping investments.
The risk in alternatives for investors today is thinking that you
are diversified, both in strategy and across sponsors, and not
realizing how correlated certain sponsors and strategies are. As
with any industry in an economic downturn you’ll see winners and
losers emerge, but it will take longer to flush out than in the
public markets, because the markets are more “malleable,”
FWR: Please explain why being a direct owner and
assets operator has advantages, and what the challenges are as
well. Can you give examples?
De Leon: Direct ownership enables a level of
agility and alignment that is difficult to replicate in a
traditional fund structure. In today’s rapidly evolving
environment – where technologies, consumer expectations, and
industry dynamics shift every 24 to 36 months – remaining
competitive requires the ability to reinvent quickly. That kind
of responsiveness is only possible when decision-making is
concentrated and not encumbered by competing interests outside
the business itself.
Equally important, being on the frontlines of operations exposes
opportunities that are otherwise invisible from a distance. At
Patient Capital [a medical business], we discovered a critical
gap in access to affordable healthcare financing – not by reading
a market report, but by living the pain points alongside our
healthcare teams and patients.
Most consumer credit platforms focus on 680+ FICO
[creditworthiness] scores, leaving behind most Americans. We
assumed a robust solution already existed, given how ubiquitous
point-of-sale financing is in other industries – but it didn’t.
That insight, the conviction to act on it, and the ecosystem to
create it, only came from direct operational exposure.
The most rewarding and the most difficult part of direct
ownership is people. Building companies means building teams, and
that requires constant balance: nurturing talent while making
hard decisions based on the evolving needs of the business.
Often, the individuals who help you reach a certain level are not
the ones best suited for the next phase. We’ve addressed this by
creating a shared services incubator that allows us to rotate
talent across companies – whether in healthcare, financial
services, or real estate – while preserving culture and
institutional knowledge. It’s a structure that allows for growth
without losing the human element.
FWR: We’ve heard you speak about the supply
chain of capital, which is dominated by organized pools of
capital that compete with private owners. Can you please explain
what this means and how you address it?
De Leon: Today the American economy is dominated
by four primary modes of capital: private ownership, venture
capital, private equity, and public corporations. I admire the
advantages each of them contributes, but, candidly, each embody
significant limitations and I’ve tried to solve these with our
investing format.
Private ownership best solves the principal-agent problem, but
generally lacks scalable, replicable infrastructure. Venture
capital correctly focuses on replicable playbooks to maximize
revenue acceleration but has historically lost the discipline to
drive profits at scale. Private equity has profit discipline but
loses the plot in financial engineering and fee maximization. The
best public corporations maximize the advantage of massive scale
and access to the world’s most liquid financial markets, but
having managers that aren’t owners, means that long-range
outcomes are seldom maximized.
The supply chain directing money from American savers, to institutions, to capital allocators, to investment advisors, to investible ideas and back and forth is so complex that fundamental conflicts of interest and abuses of trust are very difficult to even see, let alone address. For instance, when public pension plans own large LP interests in funds managed by a publicly traded asset manager, whose stock that pension plan also owns via mutual funds. Did the public pension plan pay management fees to themselves? When an asset manager sells a stake in their GP (valued on fee income) to an investment fund that has LPs that overlap their own funds, that is a circularity that is difficult to flesh out, but inevitably creates the wrong incentives for individuals, to the detriment of stakeholders.
I think direct ownership clarifies accountability. When the pain
of a mistake is going to be felt intensely, you proceed with
caution and look to minimize mistakes first. I continue to be the
biggest shareholder in everything in which we invest, and our
partners appreciate the alignment.
FWR: Can you share your thoughts on
short-termism and the dangers this creates?
De Leon: Tell me the incentive and I’ll tell you
the outcome. I always recommend that you ask the person you’re
speaking to about any transaction, to please explain how much of
their own capital is invested in the transaction they’re seeking.
A large percentage of financial transactions are one-way call
options for people with no alignment to the outcome.
It takes time to develop talent, build teams, invest capital and
develop meaningful businesses. When leaders manage to the next
fundraise or the latest quarterly earnings, I think you lose
sight of what builds enterprise value.
We want to partner with people that aren’t seeking instant
gratification and are biased to repeatable returns. I call it the
marshmallow test, the famous Stanford experiment that studied
delayed gratification – the ability to resist an immediate reward
to receive a greater reward later. The US financial system is
riddled with one-marshmallow people.
The big money is not in the buying and selling, but in the
waiting. We’re trying to let compound interest do its thing, that
is, allowing sufficient time for the market to reflect intrinsic
worth.
FWR: A decade-plus of almost zero rates,
followed by a brief spike, has been tough on the economy,
although perhaps not as harsh as some might have feared. How do
you position to account for what you think is the likely path of
public policy?
De Leon: One of the simplest ways for investors to
outperform their peers is to stay calm and rational when others
are acting on emotions. Public policy is like the wind, it
changes often, so making long-term decisions over temporary
variables makes no sense.
Not losing money is first and foremost on our minds on every
investment we make. We focus our investments on essential goods
and services like housing, healthcare and insurance where strong
fundamentals and positive demographic tailwinds provide us with a
slight buffer from the inherent risks any investor must take.
When we start there, we’ve done our job of controlling what we
can control.
FWR: Since you embarked on your financial
career, what has been the largest change you have seen? What sort
of changes and trends do you think may happen in
future?
De Leon: Technology systems that are embedded in
every part of commerce have effectively imposed a royalty on all
business activities. From payment systems, data management,
customer acquisition, marketing, and software to perform most
functions in a business. Some of these systems are visible and
some are not, but we pay for them nonetheless, and they’ve eroded
operating margins and concentrated profits in technology
companies. It mirrors a feudal tax system and the only way I see
that it can be undone, or rebalanced, is to own an equity
position in those same technology companies that are receiving
the royalty.
In the future, I think technology companies with (quasi)
monopolistic income streams will use their buying power to
acquire financial services firms (insurance, banking, investment
management) to control a larger share of consumers’ total spend.
Today they control about 25 per cent of Americans’ wallet share
but tech platforms will gradually maneuver into 50 per cent of
our total GDP. Most of the incremental gains will happen through
disguised or discrete ownership structures, difficult to perceive
or unravel.