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Retail Participation: A New Frontier for Private Markets? 

New Frontier Private Markets

In the last few years, the evolution of private markets has been characterized by growth, complexity and expanded scope. However, in 2022, investors treaded with caution.

March 2023

Eric Chng

Eric Chng
Head of Cross-Product Client Solutions, Alternative Investments and Private Markets, APAC

The year 2022 posed some of the most significant challenges to the financial markets and economic growth in living memory. For the first time in two generations, the world entered a period of low growth and high inflation. Coming off the back of nearly a decade and a half of extremely low inflation and predominantly bullish markets since the end of the Great Financial Crisis of 2008, this has unnerved investors and policy makers who are unaccustomed to such a volatile economic environment.

This backdrop has also disrupted some longer-term trends. Private markets have seen exponential growth during the past decade. However, we are now seeing a sharp slowdown in fundraising activities.

At the beginning of this year, we released the findings from our annual Private Markets study, with responses from 480 institutional investors across North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific (APAC), which explore how institutional investors will allocate across private markets in 2023. Respondents observed that higher interest rates – triggered by central banks globally to tame inflationary pressure – make leveraged investments less attractive. In APAC, 71 percent of investors cited this as a concern, largely in line with the global average of 69 percent.

However, approximately two-thirds (64 percent) of the respondents in APAC also said they plan to continue their allocation to private markets in line with current targets, only slightly under the global response of 68 percent.

According to McKinsey’s 2022 report on the sector, private markets fundraising grew annually at 6.3 percent between 2016 and 2021, and our research suggests that this growth was structural, and will continue beyond an economic downturn. The findings align with the observations in APAC. In Australia, for example, we expect that Superannuation Funds will continue to hold or increase allocations to private markets, particularly while the majority of members are in their accumulation phase. The key challenge for them would be an increased focus on deal quality and track record of the general partner (GP). However, we are seeing a slowdown in fundraising across APAC. The number of exits have fallen considerably, suggesting that portfolio valuations still remain high. This creates several challenges for the GP ecosystem, but likely brings about opportunities for distressed players.

Private equity, however, still remains the most favored asset class within private markets, with 69 percent of institutional investors in APAC anticipating it to be their largest allocation over the next two-to-three years, which is higher than global investors (63 percent).

This could be explained by two main drivers. Despite the slow fundraising environment and the increased focus on valuations and concentration risks, there are many asset owners in APAC who have just started – or are considering starting – a private markets allocation program. This new wave of investors would typically rely on a fund of funds or larger, and more well-established GPs with a proven track record.

The difficult macroeconomic environment will also see a greater focus on distressed assets, which was again highlighted by our survey, with 74 percent of APAC respondents (in line with the global average of 75 percent) saying “tougher times” would yield more “bargains” in private markets.
 

Retail investors demand investment in private markets
In the APAC region, 61 percent of respondents said there is “strong demand from retail and high net worth investors for increased access to private markets”. Globally, 55 percent of the respondents agreed with this sentiment. APAC respondents were largely in line with their global peers in their analysis of the reasons behind this growing demand, citing diversification (62 percent), yield (53 percent) and the desire to invest in successful companies before they announced their initial public offerings (53 percent).

This is a trend we have observed consistently in Australia, and it presents opportunities for Superannuation Funds to provide a globally diversified portfolio to its members. This demand can also be seen clearly in the growth of listed investment trusts typically providing real estate exposures.

Despite this observation, only 36 percent of APAC investors agreed with the proposition that private markets would function like public ones in terms of liquidity and accessibility in 10 years’ time. But this was more than the global average of 29 percent, and significantly more than respondents in the United States and the wider Americas (23 percent).

APAC investors were also clear about the difficulties in expanding this asset class widely to retail investors. Around three quarters (76 percent) said private markets need to be more transparent for this to become the case (72 percent of respondents globally said this), and 70 percent said there are a lack of suitable products and platforms (66 percent globally).

These concerns notwithstanding, more than half (53 percent) of respondents both globally and in APAC, felt that “despite higher fees and transparency issues, private markets have much to offer retail investors”.
 

How to give retail investors better access to private markets
APAC respondents were more inclined to favor investment trusts as the best vehicle for distributing liquid securitized private market assets to retail buyers. Half (50 percent) of the respondents said that this was the most suitable mechanism, compared to just over a third (36 percent) globally. Conversely, the favorite vehicle of the total respondent base was funds of funds (46 percent), which was the top choice of just 34 percent of APAC respondents.

Real estate was the asset class most respondents globally (60 percent) and in APAC (65 percent) felt was most appropriate for retail. APAC investors were considerably more inclined than the global average to see private equity as a good retail asset class (56 percent compared to 46 percent). This could be explained by the proliferation of investment trusts structures that are mainly listed in APAC, giving investors exposure to this asset class in a frictionless manner.

Another area APAC investors were more confident in than their global peers was digital asset tokenization as a means of democratizing private markets. Only 20 percent of respondents globally believed tokenized shares representing fractions of large illiquid assets, traded on blockchain or distributed ledger via smart contracts, would become mainstream in the next two-to-three years. However, 28 percent of APAC respondents felt this would be the case.

The use case for such tokenized private funds from a distribution perspective is not without its challenges, both from a liquidity-matching as well as secondary markets perspective. However, it is not surprising given Asia’s younger demographics that have a high percentage of savvy digital natives.
 

Conclusion
Private markets are not immune to the macroeconomic headwinds affecting capital market growth worldwide. However, while short-term challenges might hinder investment in certain areas of the asset class, they do not present a threat to the long-term attractiveness that has driven its growth over recent years. Private markets also present opportunities to retail investors. However, the product, platform and regulatory environment will need to adapt before these opportunities can be properly realized.

 

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