A Third Wave Of Alt-Industry Growth Is Upon Us

 | Jul 01, 2013 01:30AM ET

SEI has posted a new paper on “the retail alternative phenomenon.” The paper begins by identifying two recent waves of “particularly rapid growth” in global alternatives investing. In the first, assets under management by alternatives’ managers nearly doubled from 2005 to 2007, from $2.9 trillion to $5.7 trillion. Then there occurred what SEI rather delicately calls a “pause.”

But even as the dust was still settling from the events of 2008, the investors internalized the lesson: pursue non-correlation! And the growth of alternatives resumed. AUM reached a new record level of $6.5 trillion by the end of 2011.

Now, in 2013, we’re seeing a third wave, the migration of alternatives from institutional to retail markets. These “retail alternatives” go by a variety of names: liquid alternatives, registered alternatives, ’40 Act alternatives, and Newcits. The term “’40 Act” refers to the Investment Company Act of 1940, the legislation that gave the mutual fund industry its legal context in the U.S. “Newcits” is a play on UCITS, the European Union directives on Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities.

Until recently, until this ‘third wave,’ most efforts to bridge the divide between traditional and alternative products have come from the traditional side, with managers acquiring alternatives experience, as SEI explains, “either by acquiring or investing in an alternatives-focused firm, or by outsourcing the investment function to sub-advisors specializing in alternative strategies.” For many reasons, including the cultural differences on the two sides of the divide, established alternatives firms have not been the ones building the bridges.

But Behold the Third Wave
Private equity and hedge fund firms that are now launching or filing to launch retail products include AQR, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, Blackstone Group, Carlyle Group, and Visium Asset Management.

SEI, citing forecasts from McKinsey & Co. and Casey Quirk, suggests that by 2015, retail alternatives will account for $25 billion in revenues, and the majority of revenue growth in the retail-investing space. McKinsey’s forecast for the period up to 2015 is portrayed in the figure below.