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Crewcial Partners
:
Jul 27, 2025 10:27:12 AM
A Basic Framework For Private Equity Portfolio Construction
The private equity portfolio’s purpose is to leverage the illiquidity premium and the private market’s relative ine@iciency to generate returns that outperform the public markets, ideally by 5% annually over long-term time horizons.
To achieve this goal, we seek to construct private equity portfolios that balance risk, return, and liquidity while maintaining consistent allocations within each client’s strategic asset allocation. This document aims to create a framework to guide the implementation and construction of such a portfolio.
The private equity portfolio will consist of commitments to illiquid strategies that typically have 10-12 year terms. We must consider the characteristics of available strategies to determine if they are a fit within our framework.
is between buyout and venture capital. The strategy is worthy of an allocation in private portfolios due to its attractive risk/return profile and due to the evolving capital needs of private companies. We recommend a 10-20% allocation to growth equity strategies.
We believe our clients should take a core-satellite approach to private portfolio construction. We view core strategies as funds that are managed by established managers where the risk/return tradeo@ is viewed favorably and with greater confidence than it would be for a non-established manager. The confidence stems from the manager’s track record, our familiarity with the manager, the quality of its underlying portfolio, and/or the diversification they provide.
Non-established managers tend to be managers on funds one to three, where the firm’s track record is still being established. Over time, non-established managers can move into the established/core category depending on Crewcial’s conviction level.
We view fund-of-funds as playing an important role in private equity portfolio construction. These funds are managed by highly skilled teams and that provide access to a diversified portfolio of highly curated funds. Despite the double layer of fees, select fund-of-funds o@er strong risk-adjusted returns and valuable diversification. We believe these fund-offunds can serve the role of an established manager and can be additive to the risk-return profile of any private portfolio.
We recommend clients make 2-4 commitments to core managers over a rolling two-year basis. These commitments should be sized at the higher end of the commitment sizing ranges. We recommend 4-5 commitments to non-core strategies, sizing these on the lower end of the range.
A mature private portfolio is one where the actual allocation is at or above the target allocation and is self-funding. According to our modeling, for a portfolio starting from scratch, it can take 8-10 years to reach mature status.
For portfolios that are building towards a target, we recommend increasing the number of commitments to j-curve mitigating strategies, such as secondaries. We also recommend limiting the number of commitments to longer duration strategies, such as venture capital. This will allow the portfolio to begin building towards a target allocation while not locking in long duration funds that are not expected to begin distributing meaningful capital until years 7-10. For Building portfolios, buyout remains a core strategy due to its moderate duration, strong returns, and more predictable cash flows.
Mature portfolios can tilt their commitments towards longer duration strategies with higher expected returns. These portfolios should theoretically have more predictable cash flows and be self-funding. Exits can be lumpy and cyclical, particularly for venture capital funds, so we continue to recommend that mature portfolios include at least one secondary strategy every other year to help smooth out distributions.
Our firmest conviction is that a successful private portfolio will maintain a steady, consistent commitment pace regardless of macro conditions. However, there will be periods of time where that will become challenging due to public market performance.
During periods where public markets fall, investors can experience the so-called denominator e@ect, whereby the total portfolio’s value falls and the private portfolio’s allocation increases as a result due to the timing lag inherent to the private markets valuations. During such periods, it will be challenging to continue committing when the actual allocation exceeds the target allocation. Likewise, when public markets are strong the actual allocation may be below the target allocation and investors may feel the need to increase the commitment pace. Deviations from consistent pacing can have long-term implications for the portfolio, such as being underweight attractive vintages or overweight frothy vintages.
To mitigate these issues, we recommend clients take several actions so that they can maintain a steady commitment pace:
Given our recommendations with respect to strategy types and number of commitments, we can now make assumptions as to what the portfolio will look like over the course of a 10-year period. Below is a table that lays out the number of commitments and manager relationships required to meet our goals:
Strategy Type |
% Allocation |
Commitments (10 Years) |
Unique Managers |
Buyout |
40-60% |
12-24 |
5-9 |
Venture |
20-30% |
6-12 |
4-6 |
Growth |
10-20% |
3-8 |
2-3 |
Secondaries |
5-10% |
2-4 |
1-2 |
Total |
100% |
30-40 |
12-18 |
Geographic exposure within a private equity portfolio is best determined at the strategic asset allocation level. Should there be a market that we seek to obtain exposure to, there should be an assessment as to whether the market is best accessed via public or private investments, or some combination thereof.
As a default, we should expect that client portfolios will be heavily weighted towards North America due to proximity, abundance, and the track record of successful private investing in this market. Opportunities outside North America will be considered on a bottom-up basis in the absence of a strategic allocation mandate.
We are agnostic with respect to choosing sector specialists or generalists. There are certain sectors, such as health care, where specialization is beneficial and the market is large enough to where a specialized strategy can succeed. As the market opportunity narrows, there is a greater need to understand the opportunity in addition to the manager’s ability to execute.
In general, venture capital tends to be weighted towards technology companies, which lends itself to a model that favors generalists due to the ever-evolving technological landscape. In some sectors, such as biotech, specialization is advantageous.
Constructing a private equity portfolio can seem overwhelming due to the volume of options, frequent commitments, and numerous line items. A structured approach, as outlined above, simplifies this process for investors. This framework, combined with strong manager selection, facilitates the construction of resilient portfolios that generate meaningful alpha, thereby supporting institutional missions.
[1] All referenced performance data is from Cambridge Associates
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