What do fund of funds programs need to look like now?
The private debt market has grown globally from USD 32 billion in 2010 to USD 192 billion in 2021. An obvious evolution of the market, as was the case in the PE market about 20 years ago and in the infrastructure market about 8 years ago, is to provide some liquidity through secondary market transactions. The global private debt market has also reached this threshold. We therefore expect this segment to continue to develop dynamically in the coming years. We do not expect the increase in key interest rates in the USA and Europe to slow this down. Private debt itself benefits from rising interest rates, as most loans are structured as so-called floaters. This means that the interest rates of the loans automatically increase with the market.
The advantage of a private debt secondary market transaction is the transparency of the portfolio and the broad diversification. Typically, a secondary is acquired in year 3 or 4 of a private debt target fund’s life cycle. This means that the allocation of loans to the target companies has largely been completed. As a result, there is a high degree of transparency regarding the loans granted and the creditworthiness of the debtors. Another advantage of the already widely structured secondary portfolio is that the commitment is quickly retrieved and thus “gets to work”.
The private equity valuations show up in the 2nd quarter 2022 stable to slightly increasing. It is to be expected that in the 3. and 4. valuations will fall in the fourth quarter due to the “market to market” approach, because the lower valuations of the stock exchanges are taken into account. However, we are not currently observing a decline in corporate earnings.
After secondary transactions had seen almost only single-digit discounts on the NAVs of the traded portfolios since around 2014, the corona-induced distortions in the first half of 2020 resulted in some significantly higher discounts. However, this effect largely dissipated again in the course of 2021. We expect a similar scenario and resulting opportunities towards the end of 2022. Currently, sellers still have asking prices based on valuations at the end of 2021. These will not be maintained due to the slowdown in the economy as a result of the Ukraine crisis.
Our infrastructure funds of funds are aimed at German and Austrian investors due to similar regulatory regimes in these countries. The fourth generation of the successor fund will be launched in early 2023. Taking into account the EU taxonomy, this will be launched as an Article 8 fund.
The strategic and geographical focus is on Europe and North America. The aim is to generate current income for our investors with low volatility and a high level of risk protection through broad diversification by segment and risk/return profile. Infrastructure assets offer some inflation protection as the regulatory framework takes into account the general price trend.
About Robert Massing
As a member of the Executive Board of Solutio AG in Grünwald, Robert Massing is responsible for Investor Relations, Business Development, Marketing, Press and Human Resources. Founded in 1998, the company develops investment concepts for institutional investors in the field of alternative assets and currently manages around EUR 6.6 billion in the asset classes of private equity, infrastructure, private debt and real estate. >massing@solutio.ag