NEPC’s Josh Beers was quoted in a recent Markets Group article to discuss the importance of vintage year diversification. View the article on the Markets Group site here.
Institutional investors should be eager to deploy capital into private equity in 2023. The asset class, after all, capitalized on the economic downturns at the start of the century and during the Great Financial Crisis to produce stellar returns.
Speaking to the investment committee of the Pennsylvania Public School Employees’ Retirement System (PSERS), Corina Sylvia English, a principal with consultant Hamilton Lane, said, “the data shows the best time to invest in the asset class is right now. You are buying into a business at a low point – that is a value driver for operational focus.”
Scott Nuttall, co-CEO of KKR, concurred. Speaking on the investment firm’s third quarter earnings call, he said that “in an environment like this, companies still need capital. And we find private capital tends to have less competition at a time like this. Public markets are more difficult. Corporate M&A is more challenged. So, we’ve got a lot of capital to put to work. Companies still need it.”
But numerous institutional investors – particularly public pension funds – may need to overcome challenges to be highly active private equity investors in the coming year. These includes being overallocated to the asset class, a reduction in distributions and fund stakes selling at a discount in the secondary market. Industry observers, though, say that it is a necessity for investors to continue investing in the asset class and maintain exposure to the 2023 vintage year.
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Josh Beers, a principal and head of private equity for NEPC, said institutional investors need to continue deploying capital into the private equity sector to ensure vintage year “diversification” within their portfolio. “It’s super important,” he said. “You can go through business cycles where there are some great opportunities and other cycles that are not great.” General partners, he said, on average take three years to deploy capital – a period in “which a lot can happen.”
Click here to continue reading the full Markets Group article.