ADVERTISEMENT

Mom and Pop Should Be Free to Take a Pass on Private Equity

Mom and Pop Should Be Free to Take a Pass on Private Equity

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- Groucho Marx once joked, “I don’t want to belong to any club that  would have me as a member.”  That’s essentially how ordinary investors should feel about private equity.

Every investor — big or small, ordinary or well-heeled, 12 figure or four — should have equal access to markets. That’s a perfectly banal observation in most contexts, but it’s wildly controversial when it comes to investing. Ordinary investors are routinely denied access to the choicest investments, often based on the patronizing premise that they’re too unsophisticated to participate in some segments of the market. By the time those segments finally open to them, the trades are inevitably crowded and much of the value is depleted. What’s left is more risk than reward.

So it is with private equity. Under federal securities laws, investors must meet minimum income and asset thresholds to invest in private funds, which effectively means private markets are off limits to ordinary investors. Why? Because they’re apparently too provincial to navigate the big bad world of private investments dominated by wealthy individuals and institutional investors such as pensions and endowments.

Jay Clayton, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission and my former colleague at Sullivan & Cromwell, rightly wants to remove those barriers. In a meeting of the SEC’s new asset-management advisory committee last month, Clayton said that the SEC is seeking to “promote access and choice for Main Street investors, including more recently focusing on ways to increase access to the private markets.”

A predictable chorus of private-equity royalty, including Blackstone Group Inc. and Apollo Global Management Inc., was on hand to warn about the dangers of letting in the riffraff. Blackstone’s chief legal officer John Finley cautioned the committee that such a move must be “done right.” The Institutional Limited Partners Association, a private-equity trade group, was more brazen about its self-interest, arguing that letting in more investors would lower yields.    

They have good reason to be concerned. There was a time when private equity was the province of elite pensions and university endowments, but it has become de rigueur in institutional portfolios and increasingly those of wealthy individuals. Even Vanguard Group, the fund giant best known for its low-cost index funds, announced recently that it would introduce a private equity fund for its institutional clients.

You can credit private equity’s popularity to early investors, perhaps most notably Harvard and Yale’s endowments, which allocated large chunks of their portfolios to private investments in the 1990s and early 2000s and then yelled from the rooftops about their outsized winnings. Private equity had everything going for it in those days. It was a cottage industry with a small number of investors and a huge opportunity set. Valuations were low and interest rates were in the midst of a historic three-decade decline, a gift to an industry that relies heavily on debt. To borrow from Woody Allen, 80% of success was just showing up.

Those tailwinds have since disappeared, and the numbers show it. Private equity has become a bulging multitrillion-dollar industry, valuations are twice what they were two decades ago, and interest rates have been on the floor for more than a decade. The industry has experienced its booms and busts, like the larger U.S. economy, but the current boom is noticeably more muted. The Cambridge Associates U.S. Private Equity Index returned 27% a year from January 1994 to March 2000, the first year for which numbers are available, and 26% a year from April 2003 to December 2007, easily outpacing the stock market both times. Since April 2009, however, the index has returned 15% a year through September 2019, lagging the S&P 500 Index by 1 percentage point a year, including dividends.

Mom and Pop Should Be Free to Take a Pass on Private Equity

Many investors are bracing for even more muted results ahead. J.P. Morgan Asset Management pegs the expected return from private equity at 8.8% a year. AQR Capital Management is even less optimistic, estimating that the return for U.S. buyout funds will be closer to 3.1%, or 1 percentage point a year less than U.S. stocks. No wonder private-equity investors are guarding the gates; the last thing the industry needs is more investors.

That won’t stop money managers from singing private equity’s praises when they’re finally able to sell it to ordinary investors. In Vanguard’s release, Chief Executive Officer Tim Buckley said its private-equity fund would eventually “present an incredible opportunity” for individual investors. How does an investment that routinely charges a 2% management fee and 20% or more of profits jibe with Vanguard’s low-cost mantra? Parroting high-priced active managers, Vanguard head of private investments Fran Kinniry chided, “we’ve gotten so fixated” on fees and “what we really need to focus on is, what does the client get to keep?”

Apparently not much, based on estimates of future returns from private equity. And let’s not forget about the risks. Private equity is perhaps the most potent form of active management, typically delivering concentrated and highly levered portfolios of smaller companies. The degree to which things can go wrong far exceeds that of a broad-market stock index fund.

That doesn’t mean investing in private equity is entirely without merit. Private funds give investors access to companies that are absent from public markets, which bolsters diversification. Private companies are also protected from the daily gyrations of stock markets, which can dampen the volatility of investors’ portfolios. But for investors who don’t already own private equity, this seems like a questionable time to start.     

Which is precisely the time ordinary investors are often invited to the party. Still, it’ll be good experience. After all, how are they supposed to become more sophisticated without the opportunity to make mistakes? So yes, the SEC should remove restrictions not just around private equity but all gates that deny ordinary investors equal access to markets.

And when money managers come around with their new private equity funds, investors should ask what they’re not being offered. That’s where they want to be invested.

There are many variations of the precise quotation.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Daniel Niemi at dniemi1@bloomberg.net

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Nir Kaissar is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering the markets. He is the founder of Unison Advisors, an asset management firm. He has worked as a lawyer at Sullivan & Cromwell and a consultant at Ernst & Young.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.