1 / 30

Estimating Private Equity Returns from Limited Partner Cash Flows

Estimating Private Equity Returns from Limited Partner Cash Flows. Andrew Ang, Bingxu Chen, Will Goetzmann, Ludovic Phalippou. Q-Group, Apr 2014. Liquidating Harvard: A Cautionary Example.

sarai
Download Presentation

Estimating Private Equity Returns from Limited Partner Cash Flows

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Estimating Private Equity Returns from Limited Partner Cash Flows Andrew Ang, Bingxu Chen, Will Goetzmann, Ludovic Phalippou Q-Group, Apr 2014

  2. Liquidating Harvard: A Cautionary Example “Liquidating Harvard” Columbia Case available from http://www8.gsb.columbia.edu/caseworks/node/236/Liquidating%2BHarvard

  3. Endowment Performance (post Jack Meyer)

  4. Harvard Endowment

  5. Harvard Endowment • Harvard was an early adopter of the “endowment” model based on diversification concepts extended to illiquid assets (thanks to Swensen, Leibowitz, and others)

  6. “Returns” on Illiquid Assets • Illiquid asset “returns” are not returns • Harvard University President Faust, on the 22% loss between July 1 and October 31, 2008: “Yet even the sobering figures is unlikely to capture the full extent of actual losses for this period, because it does not reflect fully updated valuations in certain managed asset classes, mostly notably private equity and real estate.” • Returns of illiquid alternatives are biased upwards, and their risk estimates are biased downwards

  7. Infrequent Trading Infrequent trading biases volatility and beta estimates downwards. 7

  8. Infrequent Trading Infrequent trading biases volatility and beta estimates downwards. 8

  9. Infrequent Trading Infrequent trading biases volatility and beta estimates downwards. 9

  10. Sample Selection Bias Excess Return True Excess Market Selection biases the average return upwards, systematic risk downwards, and idiosyncratic volatility downwards. 10

  11. Sample Selection Bias Excess Return True Fitted Excess Market Selection biases the average return upwards, systematic risk downwards, and idiosyncratic volatility downwards. 11

  12. Building a Private EquityReturn Index “Estimating Private Equity Returns from Limited Partner Cash Flows” http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2356553

  13. Current Approaches Based on • NAVs • Deal-level • IRRs • Multiples Do not represent returns, and not based on the actual cash flows received by LPs

  14. Private Equity Returns • Based on cashflows to LPs • What you actually “eat” • Data from Prequin and proprietary datasets • Decompose into market and other factors, and the private equity-specific return (PE “alpha” or “premium”) • Can be updated in “real time” to create a private equity return index

  15. How Does It Work? • Suppose the private equity total return, g, follows • rmt is the market return • f is the return specific to PE • Risk-free return is zero

  16. How Does It Work? • Consider the cashflows of four funds, living between times t=0 to t=4

  17. How Does It Work? • According to a NPV condition, PV(Investments) = PV(Distributions) • With four funds, there are four unknowns—can solve using a non-linear root solver

  18. How Does It Work? • If the private equity return, g, were constant then there would be four funds/equations with one unknown resulting in an over-identified system • Similarly, if g is persistent (not iid), then we also require fewer funds/equations • Identification is achieved by having funds with different cashflows at different start dates, and different end dates

  19. Model • Total private equity return: • Private equity-specific component is allowed to be persistent: • NPV condition for distributions, D, and invested capital, I:

  20. 20 20

  21. Comparison with Industry Indexes • Our cash flow-implied returns are more volatile, with lower autocorrelations than industry indexes

  22. 22 22

  23. 23 23

  24. 24 24

  25. Alphas

  26. 26 26

  27. 27 27

  28. Pro-Cyclical Investing in Private Equity

  29. Private Equity Returns Over the Business Cycle

  30. Private Equity Returns • Reported returns on PE are not returns! • IRRs and multiples are not returns! • Develop a time series of private equity values representing the returns to an investor (LP), not a fund, and not a manager (GP) • Decompose private equity returns into passively replicable returns, and the unique return to private equity (“alpha” or “premium”)

More Related