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Survey of Australian Institutional Attitudes to Private Equity Investment with European (ex UK) Comparisons.

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Presentation on theme: "Survey of Australian Institutional Attitudes to Private Equity Investment with European (ex UK) Comparisons."— Presentation transcript:

1 Survey of Australian Institutional Attitudes to Private Equity Investment with European (ex UK) Comparisons

2 The Objective  To gain an understanding of the main drivers for institutions to invest/ disinvest in private equity

3 Support and Authorship  Sponsored by Adveq, a Zurich based private equity fund of funds manager  Australian survey by John Evans, UNSW  European survey by Johan Ginyard,Stockholm School of Economics

4 The Data  Australia: large superannuation funds, with 40 respondents, $A120 billion of assets  Europe: pension funds, insurers, 106 respondents, $EUR 300 billion of assets (est)

5 Current Allocations: Australia

6 Current Allocations: Europe

7 Current Investment Medium: Australia

8 Current Investment Medium: Europe

9 Current Country Allocation: Australia

10 Current Country Allocation: Europe

11 Future Allocation  Australia: stable at around 4.5% of FUM  Europe: stable at around 3.4% of FUM

12 Future Investment Medium: Australia

13 Future Investment Medium: Europe

14 Future Country Allocation: Australia

15 Future Country Allocation: Europe

16 Future Allocation by Type of Investment: Australia

17 Future Allocation by Type of Investment: Europe

18 Investment Return Objectives  Australia: absolute return of 16.5%pa, relative return of 4.5%pa  Europe: absolute return of 12%pa, relative return of 4%pa

19 Investment Drivers: Australia

20 Investment Drivers: Europe

21 Managing the Investment  Australia: predominately trustee decision and management (with asset consultant)  Europe: In over two thirds of the Nordic institutions surveyed, the CIO (Chief Investment Officer) or a dedicated Private Equity Officer is responsible for the investment decision.

22 Single Pool & FoF Investment Criteria

23 PE Barriers: Australia

24 PE Barriers: Europe

25 Conclusions: why invest?  Return enhancement for the investor remains the dominant reason for investing  Diversification is also another important driver

26 Conclusions: Barriers to investing  Predominately illiquidity issues  Europeans also see management time involvement as a serious issue  Australians don’t like the fees

27 Conclusions: How to invest  Fund of Funds remains the dominant Australian investment medium, but Europeans prefer single pooled funds  A manager’s track record, ie performance, remains the main selection criteria

28 Conclusions: where to invest  Investors are holding private equity investments at around the 3%-5% levels  Own region remains the dominant target for investment, but with increasing interest in Asia  “Buyout” situations remain the most interesting type of investment

29 Issues  What are the implications for economic development of the investor attitudes?  What should governments do to change the attitude (assuming they want to)?  What results will investors actually get?


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