Private Credit In A Liquidity Wrapper
Liquidity, Marks, and the Endgame Question Private credit itself is not new; what’s new is who it is being sold to, and at what scale. Many of the...
The work of any mission-driven organization is visible in its programs, its services, and its impact on the communities it serves. What is less visible, but no less consequential, is the investment portfolio operating quietly in the background, providing the financial foundation that allows that mission to continue across years, decades, and generations.
For institutions with perpetual or multi-generational horizons, portfolio resilience is not about maximizing returns in any single year or reacting to short windows of relative performance. It's about building structures that can support spending needs, withstand market shocks, and remain aligned with long-term mandates even when markets temporarily reward sub-optimal investments.
At Crewcial, our role is to help clients construct resilient investment portfolios that allow their missions to thrive over the long term. Such a portfolio is essential for organizations seeking a balance of competitive returns, manageable risks, and adequate liquidity, but it first requires strong governance structures focused on the right objectives. We believe this framework should include:
Good governance promotes discipline and accountability, reducing misalignment risk while supporting long-term thinking.
A truly resilient portfolio should meet three core objectives:
Balancing these objectives requires careful planning and ongoing evaluation to ensure the portfolio remains aligned with the organization's broader requirements.
Effectively evaluating returns requires a kaleidoscopic view, encompassing:
Combining absolute and relative benchmarks across multiple time periods ensures a holistic evaluation of portfolio effectiveness. Diversified portfolios designed for long-term mandates may periodically diverge from concentrated market benchmarks, particularly when a narrow market segment dominates index returns.
Resilient portfolios are not devoid of risk, but taking risk is necessary to generate the returns that help clients meet their missions. Be skeptical of any investor claiming they can generate strong risk-free returns (see: Madoff, Bernie). Organizations should instead focus on keeping risks at manageable levels, including:
The risk that ultimately matters most for mission-driven institutions is “Spending Cut” risk, or the probability of being forced to reduce annual distributions. A portfolio earning a steady 4% in cash would see real spending power erode by roughly 28% over 20 years at 2.5% inflation. By contrast, a diversified portfolio targeting 7-8% nominal returns with moderate volatility has historically supported spending rates of 4-5% while maintaining or growing real portfolio value over ten to 20 years.
Maintaining adequate liquidity is critical for meeting spending obligations and capitalizing on market opportunities, especially during dislocations. Organizations can achieve this by:
These measures allow an organization to remain nimble, deploying capital during dislocations when valuations may temporarily fall 20-40% below trend, without compromising long-term objectives or near-term spending obligations.
Resilient portfolios are the product of governance discipline as much as investment selection. Investment committees and leaders should establish a framework anchored around clear objectives regarding return expectations, risk parameters, and liquidity needs. Such portfolios may look different from the market's headline winners in any given year, but it is precisely that willingness to diverge that compounds into durable institutional wealth over time. Over full cycles, resilience has historically proven to be a sturdier foundation for sustaining institutional missions.
By generating strong returns, maintaining adequate liquidity, and managing volatility, downside, spending-cut, and reputational risks, organizations can preserve financial stability across generations. Regular review and thoughtful adaptation (at minimum annually, and more frequently during periods of market stress) keep the portfolio aligned with the horizon it was originally built to serve. The institutions still standing in 50 years will not have gotten there by accident; they will have made a series of deliberate choices, repeatedly, to build something designed to endure.
Liquidity, Marks, and the Endgame Question Private credit itself is not new; what’s new is who it is being sold to, and at what scale. Many of the...
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