By housing its private debt arm next to its private equity fund-of-funds, Neuberger ensures PE firms continue showing them deals even after a rejection. The PE firms still want Neuberger as an investor in their funds, creating a unique ability to be highly selective without damaging relationships.
General Partners (GPs) prioritize speed and certainty when allocating co-investment opportunities. LPs who build a reputation for fast, reliable decision-making can punch far above their weight, gaining access to deals disproportionate to their fund commitment size.
To source proprietary hybrid capital deals, avoid the capital markets teams at PE firms, as their job is to minimize cost of capital. Instead, build relationships directly with individual deal partners in specific industries. This allows you to become a trusted, go-to provider for complex, time-sensitive situations where speed and certainty are valued over price.
In a world of commoditized capital, offering a full suite of solutions creates a competitive advantage. By providing fund investments, co-investments, secondary liquidity, and portfolio company debt, a firm becomes an indispensable strategic partner to PE sponsors, generating proprietary and superior deal flow.
A fund-of-funds' back office is more complex than a direct VC fund's. Critical decisions around over-commitment strategies, capital recycling, and specialized fund formation are not just operational details—they directly influence final returns for LPs. Getting this specialized setup wrong can significantly mute performance.
The initial capital for a new fund-of-funds doesn't come from cold outreach to institutions. The process mirrors an emerging VC's first fundraise, relying on a personal network of operators, VCs, and high-net-worth individuals who already believe in the founder. The strategy is to work the existing network outward, not pitch institutions from day one.
In private equity, capital is the ultimate commodity. The most effective way to differentiate is through deep, singular industry specialization. This expertise generates inbound deal flow, allows for unique value-add post-acquisition, and creates a memorable brand that resonates with sellers.
The best investment opportunities are often with managers who have strong demand and don't need any single LP's capital. The allocator's core challenge is proving their value to gain access. Conversely, managers who are too eager to negotiate on terms may be a negative signal of quality or demand.
TA Associates uses a hybrid investment committee. A central group reviews deals but delegates final approval to a small team of four partners (two from the deal team, two from the committee) who conduct deep, in-person diligence. This decentralizes decision-making to those closest to the information.
As a Limited Partner (LP) in the same PE funds they lend alongside, Neuberger accesses direct, unvarnished reporting on a portfolio company's performance. This provides a more honest view of a business compared to the polished materials prepared by a sell-side investment bank during a sale process.
The firm intentionally structures its private debt funds for institutional investors without redemption options. They view offering liquidity on an inherently illiquid asset as a risky asset-liability mismatch, questioning competitors who promise an "illiquidity premium without the illiquidity."