Alt Investments
Strategic Asset Allocation - What Alternative Investments Offer

In another article about alternative investments, this publication talks to HarbourVest about trends in the sector, and the approach that private clients should take.
This publication is running a series of interviews with
organisations working in the field of
alternative investments. Here, we interview HarbourVest
Partners’ managing director, Simon Jennings.
How useful do you consider it to think of “alternative
assets” as rather being at the less liquid end of the spectrum
(with venture capital and special situation hedge funds, private
equity, etc, at one end, and listed equities at the
other)?
There is a lot of debate around this. It ties in to the trend
that sophisticated investors are using increasingly advanced
Strategic Asset Allocation (SAA) techniques. The more they adopt
these techniques, the more they realise the importance of private
equity as a component in terms of risk mitigation and
diversification, as well as returns.
As more people immerse themselves into SAA models, the key
constraint is usually their tolerance for illiquidity. Long-term
institutional investors, like pension funds and insurance
companies, have a very high tolerance for illiquidity by their
long-term liability nature, but the perceived wisdom has always
been that this is less so for private clients. Once private
investors understand that they can tolerate some degree of
illiquidity, they start viewing it as a feature of the asset
class and not a risk or a reason not to engage.
I like to ask private clients that “if 2008 happens all over
again, what percentage of your total wealth would you want
immediate access to?” The answer is never 100 per cent, and
sometimes much less than 100 per cent. So if you don’t need
access to it, it makes sense to take advantage of the illiquidity
premium. Once clients embrace this concept, conversations shift
to portfolio construction and whether they want to focus on
diversified offerings, single funds or single
companies.
In the alternative asset class space that you track, what
are the main trends you see (in hedge funds, private equity,
venture capital, real estate, infrastructure, commodities,
other)? For example: increased/decreased wealth management
interest in certain areas (please give examples); use of specific
types of vehicles (listed alternatives, offshore structures),
redemption/liquidity requirements, etc?
About 20 years ago in private equity, private clients used to be
invited by brand name funds to invest directly, but these were
mainly large family offices. Seeing market opportunities,
private banks then started building feeder vehicles for their
high net worth clients, usually with a $250,000 minimum, and
aggregate 100-200 clients to invest as one Limited Partner into
the underlying fund. In the years leading up to the global
financial crisis (GFC), these pools helped broaden the exposure
to the asset class to more high net worth clients.
At the same time, family offices started making direct
investments and co-investments, either alongside funds or in
sponsorless deals and began building up their own investment
teams.
Since the global financial crisis, there has been a bifurcation
amongst private clients in terms of those who want to invest on
their own, and those who now rely on private banks or other
intermediaries and advisors. One trend that I’m seeing in the
private client space is that private banks are no longer just
doing feeder vehicles into single funds, but now establishing a
“core diversified holding” - especially for their smaller high
net worth clients - which includes secondaries and direct
co-investments as part of this “core offering”, while single fund
feeders become the satellites in their core-satellite
positioning.
Another trend I’m seeing among both family offices and private
banks is a move to outsource some, or all, of the private markets
investment function. Even a large private bank with a
sophisticated feeder fund programme sees the benefits of
partnering with established, global and diversified private
markets investors which can lend to the benefit of scale. This
scale can take the form of access to general partners,
originating and executing co-investments, generating secondary
deals, portfolio construction and risk analysis.
There is a lot of money going into private capital
(private equity, debt, property, infrastructure) and we read
comments about the build-up of “dry powder” (uncommitted capital)
that is accumulating. Is that a cause for concern? Could yields
be squeezed? Has the chase after returns caused some
excesses?
This may be the biggest concern currently, but I think the
industry is approaching it in a far more mature way than it did
in advance of the global financial crisis. Also, we have
been here before. The deals done by some of the large buyout
firms in 2006 to 2007 drew reactions like “this deal is going to
ruin their franchise.” But most of these deals did not lose
money. Perhaps they did not provide the kind of returns that
investors would have liked, and what they did return may have
taken longer, with the associated impact on IRRs being in single
digits, but they still made money.
Several lessons have been learned over previous cycles that are
worth reminding ourselves about. Investors have to be diversified
and disciplined to invest consistently over multiple vintage
years. Doing so produces better results compared with trying to
time the markets.
To illustrate the importance of consistent investment through
cycles, HarbourVest looked back at the performance of its
portfolio over 20 years to see what would happen if certain
vintages were missed. When we excluded the worst three vintages
the portfolio did better by 4.8 per cent, but when we excluded
the best three vintages the portfolio would have underperformed
by 9.8 per cent. This demonstrates the value of committing to
this market for the long term.
Our industry is currently pricing in a recession along with
negative multiple arbitrage exit assumptions. In times like this,
it is helpful for investors to also look at assets with lower
correlation, such as secondaries and real assets. Tactically
allocating to assets with less correlation, industries not
dependent on continued GDP growth or areas of disproportionately
high growth is one way to play environments like the one we have
today.
This has been difficult for private banks offering single funds
in a feeder, as they are often restricted to two to three feeders
a year focusing on buyout funds which their clients have heard
of. This is why a core diversified holding is so important, and
it’s something that we at HarbourVest believe in passionately.
For example, the HarbourVest annual Global Fund series was
designed with private clients in mind to incorporate
diversification, consistent pacing, and the inclusion of
secondaries and co-investments to speed up both returns and
distributions and mitigate the private equity J-curve.
How much has the squeeze on yields for listed equities
and other conventional asset classes encouraged a shift to
alternatives?
There is an increasing recognition from private clients that
illiquidity is acceptable. You now see investors moving from
their fixed income portfolio to illiquid credit structures, and
from their public equity portfolios into illiquid private equity,
driven by both the promise of higher returns but also the
recognition that illiquidity is not a risk.
There is a sort of wealth management quest for the “Holy
Grail” of uncorrelated returns, encouraging interest in ideas
such as life settlement funds, liability finance, not to mention
traditional areas such as gold and diamonds. What is your take on
whether such uncorrelated returns are ever really
possible?
Going to uncorrelated areas in isolation can be a dangerous game.
Even if they do show signs of good returns, they still need to be
a proven asset class, run by a proven manager, and the assets
need to have lived through different cycles. Very few of these
have stood the test of time in isolation. Generally speaking, it
is better to focus on less correlated but proven assets rather
than uncorrelated, unproven assets. Ultimately, this is all part
of the wider strategic and tactical asset allocation discussion
where no single sub-asset class in isolation has all the answers.
A diversified, consistently paced portfolio achieves the optimal
results - but with the ability to tactically overlay specific
sub-assets, for example low correlation assets.
Has the 2008 financial crisis and its aftermath radically
changed how you think of alternative assets, or just added to the
data that you take into account about these areas?
The financial crisis reinforced our thesis that investors must
remain diversified and disciplined and that they must invest
consistently across vintage years to achieve optimal results
while also incorporating assets with lower correlation and
modelling in recessions.
It has also strengthened our focus on areas not related to GDP
growth and on areas where there’s a limited universe of buyers
who require specific domain expertise.
Are there other points you want to make?
I think there is an increasing recognition among family offices,
multi-family offices and private banks that it is hard to do what
a firm like HarbourVest does. Increasingly, they look to us as
partners to complement what they are doing themselves. This is
most obvious in secondaries and co-investments, but even getting
access to the best primary managers is tough for some groups.
The combination of experience, scale and skill is something that
is difficult to emulate, so we find that it’s best to work in
partnership. A private bank or multi-family office knows its
clients and what they need – whether it’s a core diversified
holding for the smaller high net worth clients or single company
direct investments for its ultra-high net worth clients. We work
in partnership with these groups to understand the areas where
they want to complement their in-house skills and we work
together to deliver a suite of solutions to address those needs.