Preqin On Global Alternative Assets And Learning Curves

 | Jun 04, 2013 01:25AM ET

In its newly released 2013 “Global Alternatives Report,” Preqin, the multi-national data and consulting firm, offers a good deal of news about asset allocation, especially in connection with private equity on the one hand and hedge funds on the other. It also offers a list of questions for investors doing their due diligence – questions proposed specifically in a PE context, but many of which will be appropriate in either context.

The list comes courtesy of a contribution to the report from Stephen Cravers, the head of fund analytics for Cogent Partners. The first round of questions he proposes includes these:

  • What kinds of companies have you bought and sold, and at what multiples?
  • What happened to the acquired companies fundamentals when you did so?
  • [If the PE fund has strong performance numbers], are they founded upon one recent home run, or a consistent record of well-hit singles and doubles?
  • What is the process by which you generate your investment ideas?

Cravers then tells investors they should assimilate all the data they receive as a consequence of asking such questions before the next round. This next round involves asking the PE for investment memos. Also:

  • Which firms do you see as your closest competitors?
  • How many of your limiting partners do you expect will re-up?
  • Does the GP have skin in the game?
  • Are there any side letters that put other investors on a footing better than that available to me?

Also, he says, interview portfolio company executives, intermediaries who were involved in recent transactions involving this PE fund, and current or former limited partners.

The Learning Curve for Institutions

As the graph below indicates, many types of institutions have increased their exposure to private equity particularly in recent years. Family offices (represented by the second set of bars) had 17.9% of their assets in private equity in 2009. That amount rose dramatically into 2011, peaking at 24.9%, and although it has declined a bit since, it is almost seven points above the 2009 level.

Endowment plans (the first set of bars) show an unbroken upward slope. They allocated only 8.3% to PE in 2009, and that exposure is now at 12.9%.