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The firm's successful "buy and hold" private equity strategy wasn't a master plan. It was a pivot born from the founder's inability to raise capital for a public markets hedge fund, as he had no marketable track record during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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The private equity market is following the hedge fund industry's maturation curve. Just as hedge funds saw a consolidation around large platforms and niche specialists, a "shakeout" is coming for undifferentiated, mid-market private equity firms that lack a unique edge or sufficient scale.

Due to massive fund growth, PE firms are shifting focus. They allocate resources to winning portfolio companies and use liability management to extend runway for underperformers, rather than committing fully to every investment. This portfolio-centric approach differs from the traditional model of being deeply married to each deal.

Red Ventures combines the long-term investment horizon of permanent capital with hands-on operational improvements, focusing on digital businesses. This unique structure allows them to build value without the pressure of a fixed exit timeline, fostering a culture of long-term thinking and deep operational expertise.

Unlike traditional funds that face pressure to deploy capital within a set timeframe, a HoldCo's greatest strategic advantage is patience. Value is created by waiting for the right opportunity at the right price, not by rushing to do deals.

Unlike venture-backed startups that chase lightning in a bottle (often ending in zero), private equity offers a different path. Operators can buy established, cash-flowing businesses and apply their growth skills in a less risky environment with shorter time horizons and a higher probability of a positive financial outcome.

The rigid 10-year fund model is outdated for companies staying private longer. The future is permanent capital vehicles with hedge fund-like structures, offering long durations and built-in redemption features for LPs who need liquidity.

The ultimate advantage in asset management, used by Warren Buffett and Bill Ackman, is 'permanent capital.' This structure, often a public company, prevents investors from withdrawing funds during market downturns. It eliminates the existential risk of forced selling that plagues traditional hedge funds.

D1 Capital avoids hiring experienced public market investors, preferring to recruit from private equity. PE professionals have strong analytical foundations but lack ingrained public market habits, making it easier to teach them D1's specific investment philosophy, despite a three-year ramp-up time.

Atlantic's strategy was born from its founder's dislike of private equity's core tenets. By operating in public markets, the firm avoids paying takeover premiums, maintains full liquidity to exit positions, and uses no leverage, constructing a model believed to offer superior risk-adjusted returns by applying a PE toolbox in a liquid environment.

Unlike venture capital, which relies on a few famous home runs, private equity success is built on a different model. It involves consistently executing "blocking and tackling" to achieve 3-4x returns on obscure industrial or service businesses that the public has never heard of.