Most of the times ideas come up from unusual sources, often unexpectedly mixed. This is what has happened with this post, in which I am writing about how score keeping in the game of golf and decision making psychology can provide insights about the valuation of investment performance. Continue reading
Private equity fund
Asset Managers Are from Mars, Investors Are from Venus (Part 2 – A Space-Walk Down to Earth)
In the first part of this post, I wrote about how differently asset managers and investors react to stressfull situations, with the retreat to the cave of the ones contrasting with the need for increased communication and transparency of the others. Continue reading
A Challenging Validation, “a contrario”
Over the past two weeks, the conversation and the exchange of emails with a highly reputable and quant skilled professional in the private equity industry have posed an interesting intellectual challenge and created a very useful opportunity for testing “a contrario” the DaRC methodology and for discussing the relation between duration and time horizon. Continue reading
The Neglected Weight of Time (in Private Equity History and Valuation)
There are instances, you would agree, when putting time in perspective can make a real difference. Continue reading
Stranded Capital, Fire Sales Or….
I wrote in my previous post that actual durations of PE funds are longer than those that are the perceived industry standards. The 14-year number reported in the headline of an article of a recognised magazine is a different thing, but it ties well and allows some reasoning about LP extensions, fire sales and the possible rational alternatives for investors. Continue reading
The DaRC Side of the J-Curve
It’s not a “J”, it’s an “S”! Coming out from the DaRC Room, that’s what the picture is telling! Continue reading