Some of the most popular private-equity funds — those once in such demand that they could get away with charging above-market fees — are finding it hard to fill their dance cards
Some of the most popular private-equity funds — those once in such demand that they could get away with charging above-market fees — are finding it hard to fill their dance cards.
That pressure is causing managers such as Bain Capital LLC, BC Partners Ltd. and Providence Equity Partners LLC to cut fees, according to sources familiar with the matter.
For example, for the first time, Bain Capital is giving investors two fee options for its second Asia fund, which, at $2 billion, is double the target of the first, which closed in 2007. Aside from the new fees, the new fund also will invest in China, India and Japan, a source with knowledge of the situation said.
Instead of the typical 2% management fee and 20% carried-interest fee, investors may choose Bain Capital's standard management fee of 1% with 30% of the profits, but with a 10% preferred return. This is the minimum amount of return that the fund must earn before the general partnership can start collecting its portion of the profits.
BC Partners for the first time offered fee discounts to investors committing capital before its new fund's first close, and Providence is offering deals to investors committing $500 million or more to Providence Equity Partners VII LP. Providence executives began raising the $6 billion fund in January and have $3 billion in commitments so far, according to the sources.
Executives with Bain, BC and Providence declined to comment.
“When funds are raising new capital, they are coming under more and more pressure,” said Brian Talbot, managing director and head of Neuberger Berman LLC's team that invests in the private-equity secondary market.
Most private-equity-firm general partners are willing to make concessions to larger investors if they make big investments, he said.
“And there are general partners that had above-market fees,” Mr. Talbot said. “Those general partners are bringing their fees back in line.”
ROUGH TIME
Firms whose last fund's performance was below par are more willing to negotiate to attract investors.
“The more underperforming the last fund, the more concessions they are offering investors,” said one institutional investor who asked not to be identified.
There also has been some movement in contract terms. A few firms are adopting what is called a “European waterfall,” which is considered more investor friendly.
In general, this means cash called to pay management fees and other expenses is repaid to limited partners, and managers get their 20% share of the profits only after the fund achieves a certain internal rate of return. Investors' preferred return is on all capital that is drawn down.
“There are a half a dozen ways [general partners] can affect their fee income. I think some funds will reduce or relax fees because their prior performance hasn't warranted it, and there is a desire to maximize fundraising results,” said Henry Robin, managing director at Invesco Private Capital.
Alternative-investments research firm Preqin has seen buyout funds' management fees dropping to a mean 1.71% for funds with more than $1 billion, from a mean of about 2% in 2008.
“Fee and terms concessions are far more widespread than in years past,” said Mario Giannini, chief executive of Hamilton Lane, an alternative-investments consulting firm and fund-of-funds manager.
One reason for concessions is that the adoption of the Institutional Limited Partners Association's set of industry principles and best practices has given investors and general partners a common framework for discussion, he said.
“This has given the [limited partners] a little more leverage in this environment, particularly with larger firms,” Mr. Giannini said.
Another factor is that institutional investor capital isn't as plentiful as it was before the financial crisis.
Many institutional investors still have unfunded commitments and outstanding investments from prior years. What's more, general partners are far more conscious of making fundraising easier by being more flexible on terms.
“They are more willing to be "LP friendly' than to argue why their terms should be better than someone else's terms,” Mr. Giannini said.
“This is true of both struggling funds and many oversubscribed funds,” he said. “Few funds want to be branded as exceptionally greedy in this environment.”
Last month, the Oregon Investment Council, which oversees the $59.6 billion Oregon Public Employees' Retirement Fund, committed $500 million to the Prologis-OPERF Global Industrial Venture to invest in global industrial real estate.
“We committed $500 million instead of investing in their funds piecemeal, and we received a substantial fee reduction as a result,” council spokesman James Sinks said.
This year, council officials negotiated a more favorable deal when it committed $500 million to a new buyout fund of longtime general partner Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. LP. The Oregon council began investing in KKR funds in 1978, and KKR investments now make up 15% of its $13.3 billion private-equity portfolio.
Arleen Jacobius is a reporter at sister publication Pensions & Investments.