Global Custodian Private Equity 2018 | Page 16

[ C O V E R S T O R Y | O U T S O U R C I N G ] B eing a long-only/hedge fund administrator today is a brutal and predatory business. Such is the saturation of providers in the market that experts are anticipating the industry could contract tenfold as consolidations and closures accelerate. The problems facing the sector are multidimensional. Its fund management client base is facing cost pressures as investors and regulators such as the UK’s Financial Conduct Au- thority scrutinise their fees and charges with growing zeal. Managers – eager to restrain costs and demonstrate value for money to clients – are squeezing their administrators’ the turn of the $3 trillion private equity industry to follow suit. Estimates suggest that just 30% of private equity managers in 2017 used an external administrator, and Preqin is predicting this will rise to 45% over the course of 2018. For adminis- trators, private equity is a godsend. Why private equity makes for a great client “Private equity is one of the few asset classes whose AuM is growing briskly while the seven to 21-year fund lifecy- cles of private capital funds makes for a compelling commercial case at securities services,” says Ian Lynch, global head of “Based on what I have seen, a lot of the boutique private equity and real estate administrators are either up for sale or will be up for sale fairly shortly.” BHAGESH MALDE, GLOBAL HEAD OF REAL ASSETS, SS&C TECHNOLOGIES fees thereby deflating revenues in what was already a fairly low margin business model. Attracting new clients is not easy for administrators either. Most existing fund managers are indisposed to chang- ing administrator due to the operational complexities – real or exaggerated - it creates, while launch mandates are higher risk and more vulnerable to going out of business than established shops. Fortunately, it is not all bad news for fund administrators. Just as hedge funds moved away from the self-administration model a decade ago and appointed third party providers in their hordes, it is now 16 Global Custodian alternative investors at BNP Paribas Secu- rities Services. Private equity’s transition away from self-administration has been driven by a mix of institutionalisation and business upsizing, investor pressure, regulation, reporting and strategy diver- sification. Antipathy to outsourcing however, has never been in short-supply at private equity funds, with managers reluctant to delegate to providers who they assumed did not understand their asset class. But with more fund administrators aggres- sively hiring private equity experts and investing heavily in their systems and Private Equity Issue 2018 products, this argument no longer cuts the mustard. Nonetheless, appointing a fund administrator is not always as clear- cut as it appears. Since the private equity outsourcing trend first emerged, industry watchers say there has been a noticeable growth in pro- viders – usually hedge fund administrators - purporting to be experts in the private equity field, when they are anything but. Many hedge fund administrators are strug- gling to on-board new clients, and have been opportunistically chasing private equity to offset the dry-up in business. Expertise versus inexperience While these providers may be entirely competent at servicing the needs of hedge funds, private equity is a much more complicated asset class and structure. Any attempt by administrators to service the nuanced needs of private equity – such as their bespoke waterfall distributions or management fee calculations – by utilis- ing hedge fund technology platforms and teams will naturally end in tears. “There are a large number of players in the administration market,” says Cesar Estrada, senior managing director, head of product management for private equity & real assets fund services at State Street AIS. “Combing through SEC Form ADV filings shows there to be circa 500 plus administrators servicing private market funds at the moment. We do get worried about the quality of the competition in the marketplace.” Managers should therefore scope out administrators who have invested in their private equity businesses, hired the correct expertise and built technology systems capable of handling real assets. “The accountancy skills required in private equity administration are far more complex than many other asset classes, so it is all about having the right expertise,” acknowledges BNP Paribas Securities Services’ Lynch. Who to go for? There is no right answer as to whether pri- vate equity should appoint a bank provider or a standalone for administration, as there are a number of advantages and disad- vantages with each. Banks highlight they have balance sheet and resources, which means they can invest in their services and technology, and provide a more expansive