The number of high-net-worth individuals allocating capital to private markets is increasing fast. They are wealthy individuals who own at least $1 million of liquid financial assets and seek steady returns on alternative investments.
The global private wealth market increased 73% on-year as of the end of 2023, and the upward trend is expected to accelerate as more high-net-worth investors move into private markets, seeking tailored products for their needs, global investment firm Hamilton Lane’s Co-Chief Executive Officer Juan Delgado says.
“This trend is not an exception for South Korea. Korean private wealth has rapidly increased over the past five years since investors came to learn more about open-ended funds for individuals,” he told The Korea Economic Daily during his visit to Seoul in March.
Hamilton Lane manages more than $120 billion in assets across all global private markets as of the end of 2023. Headquartered outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the US, the firm has 23 offices worldwide including the Seoul office, launched in 2015.
Hamilton Lane is a major alternative investment firm for Korean investors, managing funds from some 40 local institutional investors including sovereign wealth fund, pensions, insurers and high-net-worth individual investors.
The Co-CEO highlighted that Korean investors are sophisticated and have deep knowledge and expertise about private markets. The firm has also invested in Korean private market deals.
Hamilton Lane launched its evergreen fund, the Global Private Assets Fund (GPA), in Korea five years ago. GPA has an open-ended structure that provides flexibility for investments and the option for regular liquidity. The fund has a lower entry barrier than traditional private markets products, with a minimum $230,000 initial commitment which has attracted high-net-worth investors.
The firm differentiates itself with a multi-manager platform which allows investors to have a broad range of exposure to global partners and companies.
“Through this primary platform, we provide investment opportunities for the underlying assets which are managed by our partners, who we believe are the best managers in the world. Our clients can build well-balanced, diversified portfolios without having to pay double management fees,” he explained.
Hamilton Lane’s key strategy for private equity is co-investment in mid-market companies, that have a $3 billion enterprise value or less.
“Mid-caps are nimble and flexible. They have the potential to swiftly improve management and profitability, thus repositioning their market position. In this moment of the cycle, everyone starts moving to ‘risk on and grow.’ We think it is the best timing to buy mid-caps for both institutional and individual investors,” the Co-CEO said.
“Large companies tend to be slower to grow and take a longer time to affect change. The large caps, particularly in the tech sector, are also expensive today compared to any historical standards,” he added.
There is a common belief that mid-caps have more limited liquidity compared with large caps. However, he said, that is not the case when investors look at historical data.
“Mid-market companies are easier to refinance or sell to private equity firms. The only area where small and mid-caps might see disadvantages is the initial public offering market because it requires a minimum level of company size, but IPOs make up only about 25% of exits in private markets.”
Hamilton Lane is keeping an eye on two fast-growing industries. One is healthcare, and the other is business services.
The firm’s healthcare portfolio encompasses makers of medical consumables and devices such as bandages, blades and blood pressure monitors, as well as clinical research labs. Its business services exposure covers supply chain automation, equipment rental and software to enhance operational efficiency from retail to construction industries.
“I would say healthcare and business services are too underappreciated. There is a lot of focus on the consumer goods industry, but it is a relatively small component of private markets,” he said.
“Healthcare and business services are resilient, capex-light and process-heavy, with huge high value-add components. I believe that a lot of these areas have relations with big populations in cities, where people seek something beyond just living,” he added.
Hamilton Lane takes a careful approach to artificial intelligence ventures as the market is overheated with pockets of high risk of losing principal, the Co-CEO said. The biggest risk for most investors nowadays, however, is too much exposure to cash or real estate due to value fluctuations, he added.
He advised investors to consider balanced portfolios given their age, life plan and risk-return profiles, instead of betting too much on either private equity or credit. As equity and credit have different risk-return profiles, investors shouldn’t lean too much on one of them, he noted.
Hamilton Lane points to historical outperformance of private markets over public markets and is optimistic about the year ahead, as investors gain confidence in the US economy and the Federal Reserve’s rate policy in the mid-to-long term.
“Although risks from geopolitical and other major events around the world still remain, we believe investors are feeling more positive about the current macro-economic environment,” the Co-CEO said.
“The sentiment we are hearing from clients is that they are looking to find ways to turn the dial to risk-on a little more than 12 months ago. We see investors continue to flood into the private markets and expect the markets to revive with robust earnings of companies this year,” he added.
Write to Jihyun Kim at snowy@hankyung.com
Jennifer Nicholson-Breen edited this article.