Private Equity’s Courtship of Retail Investors Irks Pensions, Endowments

Some of the world’s biggest investors in private equity are worried they could lose their special status as thousands of retail investors get invited into an asset class that had been reserved for sophisticated clients.

Institutions such as pensions and endowments are increasingly concerned their negotiating power may be sapped as private equity funds allocate more money to doctors, lawyers and other everyday customers who pay full freight. Other big-money investors are asking how much of each private equity deal they’ll have to share with funds marketed to individuals, leaving less available for themselves.

On top of that, institutional clients are fretting that their returns could wane because fund managers flush with retail money will have to invest in mediocre deals to put all the extra cash to work.

“It is very consistently one of the top, if not the first, topic that members are asking us about,” said Neal Prunier, managing director of industry affairs at the Institutional Limited Partners Association. The trade group is seeing a spike in concerns from its more than 600 institutional investors, Prunier said in an interview.

growth wealth focused

It’s not hard to see why private equity firms are turning to individuals as a source of fresh capital, with potentially trillions of dollars of new money up for grabs. They’re forming partnerships with managers like Capital Group and Vanguard Group Inc., and launching products for 401(k) retirement accounts aimed at the mass market. This comes as institutional customers have hit the limit of how much they’re allowed to invest in private assets. Others have balked amid a sluggish market for asset sales and scarce cash distributions that they can reinvest.

Sovereign wealth funds, endowments, insurance plans and pension managers are among those expressing concern about the shift behind closed doors, according to people familiar with the situation. One private equity firm hearing from investors is TPG Inc., where institutional customers are pressing the firm to clarify what percentage of its latest flagship fund’s deal value will be earmarked for its retail fund, TPG Private Equity Opportunities, known as T-POP.