Reading 58: categories, characteristics and compensation structures of alternative investments Flashcards
Compared with managers of traditional investments, managers of alternative investments are likely to have fewer restrictions on:
holding cash.
buying stocks.
using derivatives.
Traditional managers can hold cash and buy stocks but may be restricted from using derivatives. (LOS 58.a)
Compared with alternative investments, traditional investments tend to:
be less liquid.
be less regulated.
require lower fees.
Traditional investments typically require lower fees, are more regulated, and are more liquid than alternative investments. (LOS 58.a)
An investor that wants to gain exposure to alternative investments but does not have the in-house expertise to perform due diligence on individual deals is most likely to engage in:
co-investing.
fund investing.
direct investing.
With fund investing, due diligence on the fund’s portfolio investments is a responsibility of the fund manager rather than the fund investors. Direct investing and co-investing require greater due diligence of individual deals on the part of the investor. (LOS 58.b)
Management fees for a private capital fund are determined as a percentage of:
invested capital.
committed capital.
assets under management.
For a private capital fund, management fees are a percentage of committed capital rather than invested capital. For a hedge fund, management fees are a percentage of assets under management. (LOS 58.c)
For an investor in a private equity fund, the least advantageous of the following limited partnership terms is:
a clawback provision.
a European-style waterfall provision.
an American-style waterfall provision.
An American-style waterfall structure has a deal-by-deal calculation of incentive fees to the general partner. In this case, a successful deal where incentive fees are paid, followed by the sale of a holding that has losses in the same year, can result in incentive fees greater than those calculated with a European-style (whole-of-fund) waterfall. A clawback provision benefits the limited partner investors by allowing them to recover incentive fees paid earlier if the fund realizes losses later. A clawback provision coupled with an American-style waterfall will result in the same overall incentive fees as a European-style waterfall if the transactions occur in subsequent years. (LOS 58.c)