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Private-equity secondary market

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In finance, the private-equity secondary market (also often called private-equity secondaries or secondaries) refers to the buying and selling of pre-existing investor commitments to private-equity and other alternative investment funds. Given the absence of established trading markets for these interests, the transfer of interests in private-equity funds as well as hedge funds can be more complex and labor-intensive.[1]

Sellers of private-equity investments sell not only the investments in the fund but also their remaining unfunded commitments to the funds. By its nature, the private-equity asset class is illiquid, intended to be a long-term investment for buy-and-hold investors, including "pension funds, endowments and wealthy families selling off their private equity funds before the pools have sold off all their assets".[2] For the vast majority of private-equity investments, there is no listed public market; however, there is a robust and maturing secondary market available for sellers of private-equity assets. The volume of the Secondary Market accounts for US$108 billion in 2022.[3]

Buyers seek to acquire private-equity interests in the secondary market for multiple reasons. For example, the duration of the investment may be much shorter than an investment in a private-equity fund initially. Likewise, the buyer may be able to acquire these interests at an attractive price. Finally, the buyer can evaluate the fund's holdings before deciding to purchase an interest in the fund. Conversely, sellers may seek to sell interest for various reasons, including the need to raise capital, the desire to avoid future capital calls, the need to reduce an over-allocation to the asset class or for regulatory reasons.[4]

Driven by strong demand for private-equity exposure over the past decade, a vast amount of capital has been committed to secondary-market funds from investors looking to increase and diversify their private-equity exposure.

Secondary-market participants

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The private-equity secondary market was originally created by Dayton Carr, the founder of Venture Capital Fund of America (VCFA Group), in 1982. Carr had been managing a venture capital investment firm in partnership with Thomas J. Watson Jr. who was then Chairman of IBM Corporation. As their venture fund matured Carr purchased Watson out of his partnership interest in 1979, just before Watson became U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union (Appointed by Jimmy Carter). This is believed to be one of the earliest private-equity secondary transactions. Carr, shortly thereafter, made a strong return on this investment and subsequently shifted his investment focus to purchasing other limited partnership interests in venture capital funds. Through a series of small funds, raised and managed by Dayton Carr, under the VCFA name, the secondary industry was born. VCFA is still in business today and still focuses primarily on secondary private equity investments in venture and growth equity funds. Since its inception through VCFA Group the secondary industry now features dozens of dedicated firms and institutional investors that engage in the purchase and sale of private-equity interests. Recent estimates by advisory firm Evercore gauged the overall secondary market's size for 2013 to be around $26 billion,[5] with approximately $45 billion of "dry powder" (not yet invested capital) available at the end of 2013 and a further $30 billion expected to be raised in 2014.[6] Such large volumes have been fueled by an increasing number of players over the years, which ultimately led to what today has become a highly competitive and fragmented market. Leading secondary investment firms with current dedicated secondary capital in excess of circa $3 billion include: Blackstone Strategic Partners, AlpInvest Partners, Ardian (formerly AXA Private Equity), Capital Dynamics, Coller Capital, HarbourVest Partners, Lexington Partners, Pantheon Ventures, Partners Group and Neuberger Berman.[7]

Additionally, major investment banking firms including Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley have active secondary investment programs.[8] Other institutional investors typically have appetites for secondary interests. More and more primary investors, whether private-equity funds of funds or other institutional investors, also allocate some of their primary program to secondaries.

As the private-equity secondary market matures, non-traditional secondary strategies are emerging. One such strategy is preferred capital, where both limited partners and general partners can raise additional capital at net asset value whilst preserving ownership of their portfolio and its future upside.

Types of secondary transactions

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Diagram of a simple secondary market transfer of a limited-partnership fund interest. The buyer exchanges a single cash payment to the seller for both the investments in the fund plus any unfunded commitments to the fund.

Secondary transactions can be generally split into two basic categories:

Sale of fund interests

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A common secondary transaction, this category includes the sale of an investor's interest in a private equity fund or portfolio of interests in various funds through the transfer of the investor's limited partnership or LLC member ownership interest in the fund(s). Nearly all types of private-equity funds (including buyout, growth equity, venture capital, mezzanine, distressed, and real estate) can be sold in the secondary market. The transfer of the fund interest typically will allow the investor to receive some liquidity for the funded investments as well as a release from any remaining unfunded obligations to the fund. In addition to traditional cash sales, sales of fund interests are consummated through a number of structured transactions:[9]

Structured joint ventures

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Includes a wide variety of negotiated transactions between the buyer and seller that typically are customized to the specific needs of the buyer and seller. Typically, the buyer and seller agree on an economic arrangement that is more complex than a simple transfer of 100% ownership of the fund interest.[9]

Securitization

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An investor contributes its fund interests into a new vehicle (a collateralized-fund-obligation vehicle) which in turn issues notes and generates partial liquidity for the seller. Typically, the investor will also sell a portion of the equity in the leveraged vehicle. This is also referred to as a collateralized-fund-obligation vehicle.[9]

Stapled transactions

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Commonly referred to as stapled secondaries. Occurs when a private-equity firm (the GP) is raising a new fund. A secondary buyer purchases an interest in an existing fund from a current investor and makes a new commitment to the new fund being raised by the GP.[9] These transactions are often initiated by private-equity firms during the fundraising process.[10] They had become less and less frequent during 2008 and 2009 as the appetite for primary investments shrunk. Since 2009, a limited number of spinout transactions have been completed involving captive teams within financial institutions.[11][12][13]

Low-funded secondary

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A secondary transaction where an LP gains liquidity very early in the life of the fund, where the fund has called under 10% of the fund or less[14]

Sale of direct interests

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Secondary directs or synthetic secondaries

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This category is the sale of portfolios of direct investments in operating companies, rather than limited-partnership interests in investment funds. These portfolios historically have originated from either corporate development programs or large financial institutions. Typically, this category can be subdivided as follows:

Secondary direct
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The sale of a captive portfolio of direct investments to a secondary buyer that will either manage the investments themselves or arrange for a new manager for the investments.[9] One of the most notable examples[according to whom?] of a corporate seller engaging in a direct portfolios sale is the two consecutive sales of direct portfolios from AEA Technology to Coller Capital and Vision Capital in 2005 and 2006 respectively.

Synthetic secondary or spinout
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Under a synthetic secondary transaction, secondary investors acquire an interest in a new limited partnership that is formed specifically to hold a portfolio of direct investments.[9] Typically, the manager of the new fund had historically managed the assets as a captive portfolio. The most notable[according to whom?] example of this type of transaction is the spinout of MidOcean Partners from Deutsche Bank in 2003.

Tail-end
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This category typically refers to the sale of the remaining assets in a private-equity fund that is approaching, or has exceeded, its anticipated life.[9] A tail-end transaction allows the manager of the fund to achieve liquidity for the fund's investors.

Structured secondary
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This category typically refers to the structured sale of a portfolio of private-equity fund interests whereby the seller keeps some or all of the fund interests on its balance sheet but the buyer agrees to fund all future capital calls of the seller's portfolio in exchange for a preferred return secured against future distributions of the seller's portfolio. These type of secondary transactions have become increasingly explored since mid-2008 and throughout 2009 as many sellers did not want to take a loss through a straight sale of their portfolio at a steep discount but instead were ready to abandon some of the future upside in exchange for a bridge of the uncalled capital commitments.[citation needed]

History

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Early history

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The Venture Capital Fund of America (today VCFA Group), founded in 1982 by Dayton Carr, was likely the first investment firm[15] to begin purchasing private-equity interests in existing venture-capital, leveraged-buyout and mezzanine funds, as well as direct secondary interests in private companies. Other early pioneers in the secondary market include: Jeremy Coller, the founder of Coller Capital and the individual credited with industrialising secondaries;[16] Arnaud Isnard, who worked with Carr at VCFA and would later form ARCIS, a secondary firm based in France[17] and Stanley Alfeld, founder of Landmark Partners.[18]

In the years immediately following the dot-com crash, many investors sought an early exit from their outstanding commitments to the private equity asset class, particularly venture capital.[19] As a result, the nascent secondary market became an increasingly active sector within private equity in these years.[20][21] Secondary transaction volume increased from historical levels of 2% or 3% of private-equity commitments to 5% of the addressable market.[22][23][24] Many of the largest financial institutions (e.g., Deutsche Bank, Abbey National, UBS AG) sold portfolios of direct investments and "pay-to-play" funds portfolios that were typically used as a means to gain entry to lucrative leveraged finance and mergers and acquisitions assignments but had created hundreds of millions of dollars of losses.

2004 to 2007

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The surge in activity in the secondary market, between 2004 and 2007, prompted new entrants to the market. It was during this time that the market evolved from what had previously been a relatively small niche into a functioning and important area of the private-equity industry. Prior to 2004, the market was still characterized by limited liquidity and distressed prices with private-equity funds trading at significant discounts to fair value.[25] Beginning in 2004 and extending through 2007, the secondary market transformed into a more efficient market in which assets for the first time traded at or above their estimated fair values and liquidity increased dramatically. During these years, the secondary market transitioned from a niche sub-category in which the majority of sellers were distressed to an active market with ample supply of assets and numerous market participants.[26] By 2006, active portfolio management had become far more common in the increasingly developed secondary market, and an increasing number of investors had begun to pursue secondary sales to rebalance their private-equity portfolios. The continued evolution of the private-equity secondary market reflected the maturation and evolution of the larger private-equity industry.

2008 and the credit crisis

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The secondary market for private-equity interests has entered a new phase in 2008 with the onset and acceleration of the financial crisis of 2007–2008. Pricing in the market fell steadily throughout 2008 as the supply of interests began to greatly outstrip demand and the outlook for leveraged buyout and other private-equity investments worsened. Financial institutions, including Citigroup and ABN AMRO as well as affiliates of AIG and Macquarie, were prominent sellers.

With the crash in global markets from in the fall of 2008, more sellers entered the market including publicly traded private-equity vehicles, endowments, foundations and pension funds. Many sellers were facing significant overcommitments to their private-equity programs and in certain cases significant unfunded commitments to new private-equity funds were prompting liquidity concerns.[27] With the dramatic increase in the number of distressed sellers entering the market at the same time, the pricing level in the secondary market dropped rapidly. In these transactions, sellers were willing to accept major discounts to current valuations (typically in reference to the previous quarterly net asset value published by the underlying private-equity fund manager) as they faced the prospect of further asset write-downs in their existing portfolios or as they had to achieve liquidity under a limited amount of time.

At the same time, the outlook for buyers became more uncertain and a number of prominent secondary players were slow to purchase assets. In certain cases, buyers that had agreed to secondary purchases began to exercise material-adverse-change (MAC) clauses in their contracts to walk away from deals that they had agreed to only weeks before.[28]

Private-equity fund managers published their December 2008 valuations with substantial write-downs to reflect the falling value of the underlying companies. As a result, the discount to net asset value offered by buyers to sellers of such assets was reduced. However, activity in the secondary market fell dramatically from 2008 levels as market participants continued to struggle to agree on price. Reflecting the gains in the public-equity markets since the end of the first quarter, the dynamics in the secondary market continued to evolve. Certain buyers that had been reluctant to invest earlier in the year began to return and non-traditional investors were more active, particularly for unfunded commitments, than they had been in previous years.

2010 to 2011 – post-financial-crisis

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Since mid-2010, the secondary market has seen increased levels of activity resulting from improved pricing conditions. Through the middle of 2011, the level of activity has continued to remain at elevated levels as sellers have entered the market with large portfolios, the most attractive funds being transacted at around NAV. As the European sovereign debt crisis hit the financial markets during summer 2011, the private-equity secondary market subsequently saw a decrease both in supply and demand for portfolios of interests in private-equity fund, leading to reduced pricing levels compared to pre-summer-2011. However, the volumes on the secondary market were not expected to decrease in 2012 compared to 2011, a record year[29] as, in addition to the banks under pressure from the Basel III regulations, other institutional investors, including pension funds, insurance companies and sovereign wealth funds continued to utilize the secondary market to divest assets.[30]

In terms of fundraising, secondary investment firms have been the beneficiaries of the gradually improving private-equity fundraising market conditions. From 2010 through 2013, each of the large secondary fund managers have raised successor funds, sometimes exceeding their fundraising targets.[31][32][33][34]

2012

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2012 saw a record level of activity on the secondary market peaking at around $26bn of transactions completed. Lloyds Banking Group plc sold a $1.9bn portfolio of private-equity funds to Coller Capital.[35] New York City Employees Retirement System sold a $975 million portfolio of private-equity fund interests.[36] State of Wisconsin Investment Board sold a $1 billion portfolio of large buyout fund interests[36] Swedish Länsförsäkringar sold a €1.5bn PE portfolio.[37]

2013

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In February, NorthStar Realty Finance spent $390 million buying a 51 percent stake in a portfolio of 45 real estate fund interests previously owned by financial services organization TIAA-CREF. Growth in the secondary market continued trending upward in 2013 reaching its highest level yet, with an estimated total transaction volume of $36bn per the Setter Capital Volume Report 2013, as follows: private equity $28 billion, real estate secondaries $5.1 billion, hedge fund side pockets $1.6 billion, infrastructure funding $0.7 billion and timber fund deals at $0.2 billion.[38] Average discount to net asset value decreased from 35% in 2009 to 7% in 2013.[2]

2014

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Growth in the secondary market continued trending upward in 2014 reaching its highest level yet, with an estimated total transaction volume of $49.3bn per the Setter Capital Volume Report 2014, as follows: private equity $37.9 billion, real estate secondaries $6.8 billion, hedge fund side pockets $2.5 billion, infrastructure funding $1.9 billion and timber fund deals at $0.2 billion.[39] According to Setter Capital Inc, there were a total of 1270 transactions in 2014, with an average size of approximately $37.7 million. Although the number of transactions was roughly the same as in 2013, the average deal size increased 34.6% year over year, reflecting the fact that more multi-hundred million / billion+ dollar transactions were completed in 2014. Indeed, the breadth and number of buyers continues to increase with total volume and activity of small and medium buyers becoming more significant. Large buyers accounted for 59.8% of the market's total volume in 2014, while mid-sized buyers accounted for roughly 34.9% of total volume and small buyers represented roughly 5.3%. Also driving the expansion of the secondary market is the number of buyers expanding their scope of interest into areas in which they were previously inactive. Approximately 31.4% of buyers broadened their secondary focus in 2014 to include buying other alternative investment types (e.g. infrastructure, real estate, portfolios of direct, etc.) – an increase of 1.4% from 2013.[40]

2014–2018

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During the four-year period between 2014 and 2018, the secondaries market continued its upward trajectory, approaching $40 billion in transaction volume in the second half of 2017.[41] The figure represents approximately five times total deal activity from 2005 levels. Market watchers attributed the rise to the growing sophistication of secondaries transactions, increased demand for liquidity on the part of institutional investors and a growing number of fund managers using the secondary market to gain access to new streams of capital.[41]

The period also gave rise to GP-led restructurings, in which a fund manager leads efforts to restructure the economics of the fund or roll existing fund commitments into a new vehicle. According to Credit Suisse, GP-led secondaries have grown from 10 percent of the market in 2012 to over a third by the end of 2017.[42] Market insiders predict GP-led secondaries to eventually reach 50 percent of market share by the end of 2018,[43] attributing a growing acceptance of their use among marquee private-equity firms such as Warburg Pincus and BC Partners as cause for their mainstream acceptance.

Milestones

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The following is a timeline of some of the most notable secondary transactions and other milestones:

2011

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2010

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2009

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2008

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2007

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2006

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2005

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2004

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  • Bank One sells a $1 billion portfolio of private-equity fund interests to Landmark Partners
  • The State of Connecticut Retirement and Trust completes the sale of a portfolio of private-equity fund interests to Coller Capital, representing one of the first secondary market sales by a US pension fund
  • Abbey National plc completes the sale of £748m ($1.33 billion) of LP interests in 41 private-equity funds and 16 interests in private European companies, to Coller Capital[77]
  • Swiss Life sold more than 40 fund and direct investments to Pantheon Ventures[78]
  • Vintage Investment Partners announces first venture Secondary fund, the largest ever based in Israel and the Middle East.[79]

2003

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  • HarbourVest acquires a $1.3 billion of private-equity fund interests in over 50 funds from UBS AG through a joint-venture transaction[80]
  • Deutsche Bank sells a $2 billion investment portfolio to a consortium of secondary investors, led by NIB Capital (today AlpInvest), that would become MidOcean Partners[81]

2002

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  • W Capital, first fund developed to purchase direct company positions on a secondary basis, formed[82]

2001

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2000

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1999

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1998

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1997

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  • Secondary volume estimated to exceed $1 billion for first time

1994

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1992

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  • Landmark Partners acquires $157 million of LBO fund interests from Westinghouse Credit Corporation
  • VCFA Group completes the purchase of the Northrop Grumman Ventures portfolio of assets

1991

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  • Paul Capital founded and acquires $85 million venture portfolio from Hillman Ventures

1989

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1988

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1982

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  • Venture Capital Fund of America (VCFA Group) founded by Dayton Carr

See also

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References

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Notes

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  1. ^ Lemke, Lins, Hoenig & Rube, Hedge Funds and Other Private Equity Funds: Regulation and Compliance, §5:28; §§13:34 - 13:38 (Thomson West, 2014 ed.).
  2. ^ a b Ryan, Dezember (April 24, 2014). "Bargain Bin Is Now Big Deal". WSJ. Retrieved 29 April 2014.
  3. ^ Burroughes, Tom (2023-03-21). "In Tough Times, Private Market Secondaries Can Shine". Wealth Briefing. Retrieved 2023-09-22.
  4. ^ Lemke, Lins, Hoenig & Rube, Hedge Funds and Other Private Equity Funds: Regulation and Compliance, §13:34 (Thomson West, 2014 ed.).
  5. ^ Evercore: Distressed sellers 1% of 2013 market volume PEI Media, 14 April 2014
  6. ^ Evercore: secondaries funds target $30bn PEI Media, 14 April 2014
  7. ^ The Private Equity Analyst Guide to the Secondary Market. Private Equity Analyst, 2004
  8. ^ Source: Private Equity Intelligence
  9. ^ a b c d e f g The Private Equity Secondaries Market, A complete guide to its structure, operation and performance The Private Equity Secondaries Market, 2008
  10. ^ "Escaping PE Purgatory Through A Secondary Sale." Buyouts, July 7, 2007
  11. ^ "UK GPs: It's spin-out time Archived 2011-07-15 at the Wayback Machine." PrivateEquity Online, July 15, 2010
  12. ^ "Lehman to spin out European mezzanine unit." Financial Times, May 10, 2010
  13. ^ "Fidelity spin-out doubles in size." Financial News, February 23, 2010
  14. ^ Just closed a new fund and already an investor wants out?! Abe Finkelstein, Vintage, July 23, 2019]
  15. ^ Contrarian : Second Helping Archived 2008-03-09 at the Wayback Machine (Dealmaker, 2007)
  16. ^ "Europe's 50 Most Influential in Private Equity 2019 - Slideshow - Private Equity News". www.penews.com. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  17. ^ "Secondary sales of private equity interests Archived 2009-02-06 at the Wayback Machine." AltAssets, February 18, 2002
  18. ^ The Private Equity Analyst: PE Wire Archived 2008-09-10 at the Wayback Machine (Private Equity Analyst), February 24, 2003.
  19. ^ Cortese, Amy. "Business; Private Traders See Gold in Venture Capital Ruins." New York Times, April 15, 2001.
  20. ^ "Secondaries Getting Primary Attention." Buyouts, July 22, 2002
  21. ^ "Secondaries Pros Discuss Market's Evolution[dead link]." Secondaries Pros Discuss Market's Evolution - Cont'd[dead link]. Buyouts, December 16, 2002
  22. ^ Vaughn, Hope and Barrett, Ross. "Secondary Private Equity Funds: The Perfect Storm: An Opportunity in Adversity". Columbia Strategy, 2003.
  23. ^ Rossa, Jennifer and White, Chad. Dow Jones Private Equity Analyst Guide to the Secondary Market (2007 Edition).
  24. ^ A Secondary Market for Private Equity is Born, The Industry Standard, 28 August 2001
  25. ^ "Buyouts Still Dominate Surging Secondaries Market: Some Say Market Is Overcapitalized Fund-of-Join The Game." Buyouts, May 24, 2004
  26. ^ Private Equity Market Environment: Spring 2004 Archived 2008-09-10 at the Wayback Machine, Probitas Partners
  27. ^ Cash panic sweeping VC industry: The capital calls problem VentureBeat, November 7, 2008
  28. ^ MAC uncertainty grips sellers in secondary market Archived 2009-02-01 at the Wayback Machine Private Equity Online, November 3, 2008
  29. ^ Secondary market set to break records, Private Equity Online, February 1, 2012
  30. ^ Singapore's GIC Said to Offer $700 Million in Buyout-Fund Stakes, Bloomberg, January 20, 2012
  31. ^ LGT Capital Partners announces final close of Crown Global Secondaries II plc Archived 2011-07-13 at the Wayback Machine. LGT Capital Partners, June 24, 2010
  32. ^ Morgan Stanley beats target for $500m secondaries fund. Efinancial News, May 18, 2010
  33. ^ Axa Private Equity Said to Seek More Capital for Secondary Fund. Bloomberg, February 1, 2012
  34. ^ Credit Suisse Raises $2.9 Billion to Purchase Secondary Stakes, Business Week, February 14, 2012
  35. ^ European Secondaries Deal of the Year, 2012 Archived 2013-09-21 at the Wayback Machine Private Equity International, March 13, 2013
  36. ^ a b Running From Megafunds, Wisconsin Sells $1B Portfolio.
  37. ^ Swedish Länsförsäkringar to sell €1.5bn PE portfolio. Unquote PE, August 20, 2012
  38. ^ Private equity secondary deal volume totals $36 bln: survey Reuters: PE Hub, DECEMBER 23, 2013
  39. ^ Secondary volume goes through the roof Reuters: PE Hub, JANUARY 22, 2015
  40. ^ Setter Capital Volume Report 2014 Setter Capital, JANUARY, 2015
  41. ^ a b Espinoza, Javier (31 July 2017). "Secondary private equity deals near record". Financial Times. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
  42. ^ "GP-Led Secondary Transactions: A "New-Fashioned" Way of Achieving Liquidity" (PDF).
  43. ^ "Demystifying a Roaring Secondaries Market | Navatar". Navatar. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
  44. ^ http://mediacommun.ca-cib.com/sitegenic/medias/DOC/94509/2011-12-16-cp-casa-coller-cession-cape-eng.pdf Archived 2012-05-23 at the Wayback Machine. Crédit Agricole press release, December 16, 2011
  45. ^ AXA Unit to Buy $1.7 Billion Portfolio From Citigroup. New York Times, June 8, 2011
  46. ^ Banks seen selling Private Equity assets, but not at any price Archived 2013-11-05 at the Wayback Machine, Reuters, July 19, 2011
  47. ^ AlpInvest picks up $800m in fund stakes from CalPERS. AltAssets, April 7, 2011
  48. ^ "Lexington Partners To Buy $730M Private Equity Portfolio From Lloyds." Wall Street Journal, December 15, 2010.
  49. ^ "Lloyds sells private equity division to Coller Capital." The Telegraph, July 6, 2010.
  50. ^ " http://www.financialpost.com/markets/news/Citi+Divest+Private+Equity+Fund+Funds+Investments+Businesses/3270599/story.html Citi to Divest Private Equity Fund of Funds and Co-Investments Businesses."Financial Post, July 13, 2010.
  51. ^ "AXA buys $1.9 billion private-equity portfolio from BofA." Reuters, April 22, 2010.
  52. ^ "3i agrees VC asset sale with Coller, HarbourVest consortium." PEI Asia News, September 13, 2009.
  53. ^ "PE Secondaries Alert." PE Secondaries Wire, November 2, 2009.
  54. ^ "APEN Press Release Archived 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine."APEN, October 27, 2009.
  55. ^ "Goldman group snags ABN AMRO unit Archived 2009-02-02 at the Wayback Machine." Pensions&Investments, August 12, 2008.
  56. ^ "Discount offered to offload ABN Amro's Secondaries". Penews.com. 2008-08-18. Archived from the original on 2015-04-03. Retrieved 2014-07-30.
  57. ^ "Macquarie Capital will spend $836m to go private Archived 2009-02-04 at the Wayback Machine". The Australian, June 17, 2008
  58. ^ "Macquarie Capital soars on buyout plan Archived 2008-08-03 at the Wayback Machine". The Sydney Morning Herald, June 16, 2008
  59. ^ CalPERs private equity stakes under microscope. Archived 2009-02-01 at the Wayback Machine Reuters 'Dealzone' November 20, 2008.
  60. ^ Craig, Catherine. Five buy record $3bn Calpers portfolio. Financial News, February 5, 2008.
  61. ^ Tracy, Tennille. Calpers, and where private-equity funds go to die. Wall Street Journal's Deal Journal blog, November 5, 2007.
  62. ^ Press Release: Coller International Partners V closes at $4.5 billion' Archived 2007-12-28 at the Wayback Machine
  63. ^ "Lexington Capital Partners VI". Lexingtonpartners.com. Archived from the original on 2013-11-05. Retrieved 2014-07-30.
  64. ^ Primack, Dan (2007-04-03). "OBWC Portfolio Sale Nears End". Pehub.com. Retrieved 2014-07-30.
  65. ^ Ohio Bureau of Worker's Compensation -- Review of Secondary Advisor Selection Process
  66. ^ "Secondaries join the mainstream". Financialnews-us.com. Archived from the original on 2007-08-13. Retrieved 2014-07-30.
  67. ^ "Dow Jones Financial News: Goldman picks up Mellon portfolio". Efinancialnews.com. 2007-01-04. Retrieved 2014-07-30.
  68. ^ "American Capital Raises $1 Billion Equity Fund; Expands Its Asset Management Business; Will Host 9 am Conference Call". American Capital Strategies. PR Newswire. 2006-10-04. Archived from the original on 2010-09-20.
  69. ^ American Capital raises $1bn fund Archived 2009-02-06 at the Wayback Machine. (AltAssets)
  70. ^ ACS spins off stakes into $1B fund (TheDeal.com)
  71. ^ Singapore's Temasek Hits Hard Going (Asia Sentinel, 2007)
  72. ^ Liquid Realty Acquires GBP 435 Million Real Estate Secondary Portfolio. Business Wire, May 3, 2006
  73. ^ AlpInvest and Lexington Partners buy $1.2bn secondary portfolio from DPL Archived 2008-05-06 at the Wayback Machine (AltAssets)
  74. ^ "M&A legal guru urges more diligence". Marketwatch.com. 2005-02-17. Retrieved 2014-07-30.
  75. ^ DPL to sell PE stakes for $850M Archived 2013-11-05 at the Wayback Machine (TheDeal.com)
  76. ^ Lexington Partners Buys Merrill Lynch Portfolio. Private Equity Analyst, April 2005 (p.10)
  77. ^ Press Release: Abbey sells private equity portfolio to Coller Capital Archived 2009-01-08 at the Wayback Machine
  78. ^ Pantheon acquires Swiss Life private equity portfolio Archived 2009-02-06 at the Wayback Machine. AltAssets, 2004
  79. ^ "Vintage fund raises $65 million". TheMarker.
  80. ^ Name A-D E-J K-P Q-Z. "HarbourVest transactions". Harbourvest.com. Archived from the original on 2012-07-30. Retrieved 2014-07-30.
  81. ^ MidOcean Embraces Independence. Financial Times, March 9, 2003
  82. ^ "The evolution of private equity secondary activity in the United States: liquidity for an illiquid asset" (PDF). Retrieved 2014-07-30.
  83. ^ Press Release: Lucent Technologies and Coller Capital form independent venture firm to manage Lucent's New Ventures Group portfolio Archived 2009-02-01 at the Wayback Machine
  84. ^ Press Release: The Royal Bank of Scotland: asset sale Archived 2008-05-06 at the Wayback Machine
  85. ^ Lehman Brothers acquired The Crossroads Group in 2005
  86. ^ Cawley, Rusty "Crossroads uses EDS portfolio to launch fund." Dallas Business Journal, September 24, 1999
  87. ^ "Newbury Partners Promises To Keep A Secret." Buyouts, August 20, 2007
  88. ^ Pantheon Ventures: Secondary Investments Archived 2013-06-30 at archive.today. Company Website