We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
Due to its massive scale, franchise quality, and expected corporate access (e.g., quarterly earnings calls), $PSUS will likely trade differently than typical closed-end funds, potentially commanding a premium to NAV.
The PS management company is expected to distribute most of its cash flow as dividends. The team's compensation is tied to their large equity stake and performance fees, not high salaries, allowing for a clean income statement.
Company investor relations teams want stable, long-term shareholders. Funds known for 5-10 year holding periods become preferred partners for management, providing deeper insights and a research edge unavailable to short-term hedge funds or index funds.
Critics argue Pershing can't grow AUM while its funds trade at discounts. However, the historic $5 billion launch of $PSUS, while its London fund ($PSH) traded at a 30% discount, proves the team can successfully raise new capital regardless.
Despite the structural limitations of a '40 Act fund, Bill Ackman's team is expected to find innovative methods to continue its successful macro hedging strategy, a key component of its historical outperformance.
With truly permanent capital and a lean team of 50, Pershing's management company ($PS) has unparalleled operating leverage. Its AUM can double in three years from performance alone, justifying a 30x+ multiple on fee-related earnings.
While Pershing's London-listed fund ($PSH) has a larger discount, $PSUS is more accessible to US investors with specific mandates and tax considerations, like Texas Teachers, creating a distinct and strong demand base.
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.
Typical asset manager valuation as a percentage of AUM is misleading for Pershing. Unlike peers whose "permanent capital" is often 6-year funds, Pershing's capital is truly permanent, and its operating leverage is vastly superior, justifying a different valuation framework.
Unlike private market ETFs whose prices can be driven by public market sentiment, AngelList's USVC is a closed-end tender offer fund. This structure ensures the price at which investors buy and sell shares is roughly equal to the underlying net asset value (NAV) of the portfolio companies, creating a more stable, fundamentals-driven investment vehicle.
Like a Bitcoin trust, a closed-end venture fund has shares that trade based on market sentiment, not just underlying asset value. This means the fund's shares could be priced at a discount or premium to its portfolio's Net Asset Value (NAV), reflecting public perception.