Wealth Strategies
Partners Capital Brings "Endowment Mindset" To Investments
The firm, founded in 2001, is one of a number of outsourced CIOs overseeing money for institutions and UHNW individuals. Perhaps unsurprisingly, it says inflation is top of mind as a concern for clients.
The founders and managers of investment houses, such as private
equity firms, have plenty of insight into what drives returns.
And that means that serving this very distinct population needs a
laser-like focus on achieving results in all financial
weathers.
Partners
Capital, a global outsourced chief investment office firm
overseeing $48 billion, has been operating in the OCIO space for
21 years, and advises families and institutions such as the
endowment funds of Oxford and Cambridge in the UK and Syracuse
University in the US. It also serves institutions in the arts,
sciences and healthcare fields, such as the Metropolitan Opera
Company and Cancer Research Institute.
One distinctive point is that a lot of the private clients of
Partners Capital are themselves owners and partners of investment
firms. Partners Capital has clients from firms such as
Blackstone, KKR, Bain Capital, TA Associates and Summit Partners,
for example.
“If you’re a successful partner in an investment firm you often
want to diversify your wealth and sources of return beyond what
your own firm offers,” Paul Dimitruk co-founder and senior
partner of Partners Capital, told this news service recently.
(Dimitruk also wrote an article on the "dos and donts" of
multigenerational investing,
here.)
Partners Capital builds family endowments for these investment
professionals, many of whom are first generation wealth
creators.
Other Partners Capital clients are multi-generational families
who join as Partners Capital clients when they recognize the
complexities and challenges of multi-generational investing, he
said.
“One should think of family wealth as a long-term endowment much
like a college endowment…that frames everything,” he
continued.
The ascent of OCIOs such as Partners Capital reflects how some
institutions, including multi-family and single-family offices,
have found it easier and less expensive to farm out the job of
making investments, and dispensing advice, rather than trying to
do this in-house.
Another example of an OCIO business is Hirtle
Callagahan.
Today, Cerulli
Associates, the Boston-headquartered analytics firm, said
non-profit organizations seek OCIOs at a
“higher-than-historical rate”, such as because they lack access
to high-quality private investments and want a “strong
environmental, social, and governance policy”. Cerulli said it
expects to see OCIO platforms with strong ESG positioning in
their private asset classes at an advantage when winning new
clients in the non-profit space. In its report, Cerulli said
79 per cent and 69 per cent of OCIO providers expect the demand
for private equity and other private investments, respectively,
to increase.
Private is where returns are
Dimitruk doesn't think that investors can rely on
listed equities to drive adequate returns, touching on the
secular shift toward private market investments that has,
with some interruptions, been going on since the dotcom boom of
the late 1990s.
“Our view is that conventional public equities are highly
unlikely to provide the returns one is looking for to support
institutional or family objectives.”
The world of rising interest rates has changed the investment
equation, he said.
“We do a lot in private equity, private credit and private real
estate. The primary source of excess return (Alpha) in investing
compound over time in terms of returns. However private markets
are both complex and challenging to access. Over the past 40
years, central banks actively suppressed risk, maintaining an
essentially zero cost of capital. Life in the investment world
was easier, but this benign era where risk was masked is now at
an end,” he said.
“As interest rates have gone up, the discounted future value of
earnings has gone down. This had a negative impact on the
valuation, particularly of high-growth firms, notably tech firms,
causing a massive re-rating of these businesses,” Dimitruk
continued.
Inflation is top of mind
Asked what most concerns clients, Dimitruk said inflation and the
path of interest rates are top of the agenda.
“The primary questions clients ask today are over the future
direction of inflation and interest rates and the impact
on both their investment programs and on their ability to
sustain their financial objectives, notably the spending rates of
philanthropic institutions such as a school,” he said.
“The rise in inflation was not a surprise given recent monetary
and fiscal policy, but what no one could have foreseen was how
much inflation would be further stimulated by the Russian
invasion of Ukraine and the Chinese Covid lockdowns,” he
continued.
Founded in 2001, Partners Capital has offices in Boston, New
York, London, Singapore, Hong Kong, San Francisco and
Paris.
Families and endowment mind-set
Dimitruk referred to one family client that represents seven
generations starting in Europe, they are now in the US as well,
with more than 250 members. This can create a higher level of
complexity than with first generation wealth.
Waiting until the senior members are no longer able to manage the
family wealth themselves and failing to address the “endowment”
aspect of such wealth, can put a family’s goals at risk, such as
the ability to support philanthropic goals over the long term, he
added.