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Mainstream Investors Might Get Access to Alts, But They Won’t Get Alpha

蔡亚协会认为,如果市场良好,零售投资者仍将受益于替代投资的增加的多样化。

从现在开始五年,替代投资可能是近四分之一的全球资产。“特许替代投资分析师协会”争辩说,监管机构和其他人需要确保零​​售投资者能够获得产品的访问权限,并将保障措施进行保护以保护它们。

“We need to make it much more fair,” John Bowman, senior managing director at the CAIA Association, said in an interview.

The group’s new report, “The Next Decade of Alternative Investments: from Adolescence to Responsible Citizenship,” suggests that regulators “will be forced to address the perceived inequities” created by the movement of capital into private markets.

“This will include the shortcomings of public markets as well as the growing risks and lack of transparency from private markets,” the report’s authors wrote. “Additionally, we are likely to see a significant push towards opening private market access to retail investors, something which is already starting to generate buzz, but which comes with substantial risks both for investors and the industry.”

One of the risks to investors pointed out by CAIA is the rising use of leverage and, with that, the increased potential for companies to go bankrupt. Leveraged buyouts are ten times as likely to end in bankruptcy than a public company, according to CAIA, which offers the CAIA Charter, a credential for alternative investments professionals. The group also said that institutions committing record amounts of money to private markets means future returns are likely to decrease.

The report was based in part on the responses of more than 1,000 CAIA Association members. It calls for action on a number of issues, including a renewed commitment to education on alternatives, more transparency, and better access for smaller investors.

[IIDeep Dive:养老金比以往更喜欢替代投资]

但将“民主化”私募股权和风险投资的举措也将导致投资者获得测试版,而不是阿尔法,而不是alpha,历史上归于机构的超额回报。根据该报告,这是行业需要与投资者沟通的关键点。

曹仍然认为零售投资者将受益于多元化和较低波动,即替代品可以提供通过房地产,私募股权,基础设施或真实资产。“但消息需要一个客观和整体叙述,围绕测试曝光,并不相关的回报,而不是掌握alpha,”该组在报告中表示。

“We want the narrative to be a risk-adjusted return story, not an alpha story,” Bowman said by phone. “Still we think there is an illiquidity premium. Alpha is competed out and has gotten narrower over the years. It used to be easy to find winners [in private equity]. Now it’s hard. Top decile GPs, they’re still doing great. But why do only those who have the rolodex, get access to the top decile? So there’s inequity in access. Even though it’s hard to know the exact form, we need to have some kind of a managed marketplace, so there’s equal access to managers.”

As William Kelly, CEO of the CAIA Association, put it, “Alpha is an elusive commodity.”

“If somebody could create the Vanguard of alternative investments, you could get access to cheap beta and the diversification value proposition would be very clear,” he said. “But it’s far more complicated than that. We need to find ways of bringing greater diversification, beta, but to try to throw alpha in there and prove it with a high fee is not the answer.”

Kelly said that he’s optimistic that the private equity model is changing, whether that’s through innovative tokenization efforts that could help build a secondary market or other initiatives, such as distribution platform iCapital.

According to CAIA, alternative investments grew from 6 percent to 12 percent of global investments between 2003 and 2018. Members of the organization expect growth to continue, with alternatives representing between 18 percent and 24 percent of global assets by 2025. The reasons behind the growth include low interest rates, which fell even more since the market meltdown began in March, the pressure from underfunded pensions, the maturation of emerging markets, and the changes in how companies tap new capital.

“With such a large portion of the global economy now off limits to retail investors, regulatory bodies are beginning to debate whether to democratize access to this suite of more opaque and complex instruments, making them available to a wider set of investors,” the report concluded. “The outcome of this debate has the potential to radically alter not just the alternative investment landscape but investing as we know it.”