Management fees need to improve, say institutional investors

The majority of institutional investors believe that more needs to be done with regards to the management fees they pay on alternative assets fund investments, finds a Preqin report.

Of the five major alternative asset classes—private equity, hedge funds, real estate, infrastructure and private debt—investors named management fees as the area that needed the most improvement with regards to alignment of interests in all asset classes but private debt. Within private debt, it was second behind the amount managers commit to their own funds.

Preqin has witnessed the average fees of alternative assets funds fall noticeably over recent years—the mean management fee of 2014 vintage private equity buyout funds is 1.90% compared to 2.01% for vintage 2007 funds.

Read: Are money managers’ fees fair?

Hedge funds launched last year have mean management fees of 1.54% compared to 1.65% for funds with a 2008 inception. While it’s evident managers are making efforts to reduce the fees they charge, it’s apparent that investors believe that more can be done.

“While the fees paid by investors in alternative assets funds have long been a point of contention, the last few years have seen investors become ever more vociferous,” says Preqin CEO Mark O’Hare.

Other key findings from the report show:

Real estate set for largest capital inflows: 79% of active investors in real estate plan to invest more capital in the asset class in 2015 than in 2014, with none intending to invest less. This is a higher proportion than any other alternative asset class.

Private equity most “positive” asset class: investors in private equity had the highest proportion that felt positive about the asset class, with 59% of investors stating so. This was closely followed by infrastructure investors, with 57% feeling positive about the asset class.

Investors allocate most to hedge funds: 17% of investors in hedge funds allocate 20% or more of their assets under management to the asset class, higher than any other alternative asset. This is followed by 6% of real estate investors that allocate 20% or more of their assets under management.

Private debt poised for growth: 55% of investors in private debt indicated that they would invest more capital in the expanding asset class, and 65% are looking to increase their allocation over the longer term.

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