- September 18, 2024
- Posted by: vitalclick
- Category: Investments
New empirical research from Schroders Capital reveals that small and mid-sized private equity funds have outperformed large funds with greater resilience through economic cycles.
As the private equity market has grown over the past few decades, large funds have attracted an increasingly large share of overall limited partner (LP) capital. Investors have gravitated towards large private equity funds under the assumption that they offer better returns and resilience due to scale and stability.
Our analysis shows that small and mid-sized private equity funds have, in fact, outperformed their large counterparts with more robust and persistent returns through time. Moreover, with the small- and mid-segment contributing the vast majority of opportunities in private equity, we believe investors should not overlook this valuable portion of the market.
Small- and mid-sized funds – favourable fundraising dynamics
We have analysed data from over 64,000 private equity funds and 400,000 deals in buyout, growth, and venture capital from 2000 to 2023 (for the purpose of performance analysis, we have excluded fund vintages beyond 2017, where performance is likely not stable. Single-deal funds and funds of funds excluded. Deals below $1m are excluded).
We classify the small and mid-sized segment as funds under $500m and $2bn respectively and deals under $50m and $200m respectively. The data presented hereafter encompasses all regions and strategies, unless otherwise stated:
Over the last decade, fundraising by large funds has far outpaced deal flow, resulting in higher competition and thus entry multiples for large deals. Large deal flow has grown at 1.6x, while fundraising from large funds has grown at 14.9x. Small and mid funds, by contrast, have experienced 2.7x growth in annual deal flow over the last decade, while annual fundraising has grown at just 2.4x.
Not only is the pace of fundraising growth much higher in large funds, fundraising levels are already far above the long-term trend, according to the Schroders Capital Fund Raising Indicator (FRI).
The FRI is a Schroders Capital proprietary model that shows the areas of the private equity market that are above or below long-term fund-raising levels. The long-term trend is based on fundraising levels adjusted for inflation and excludes business cycles. Excessive amounts of capital leads to more competition for deals, higher prices being paid and, ultimately, likely worse returns.
We currently observe that fundraising in European and North American large buyout funds is 100% above the long-term trend compared to only 40% above trend in small and mid buyout funds.
The ‘long tail’ of private equity
Historically, the small and mid segment of the market has offered far more investment opportunities in both funds and deals.
According to Preqin data from 2010 to 2023, there have been 50x more small and mid funds in the market than large funds, and 17x more small and mid-deal opportunities than large deals. In other words, the small and mid segment makes up the bulk of the “long tail” of private equity, accounting for 98% of all funds in market and 94% of all deals.
Entry multiples are more attractive in small- and mid-sized deals
Tracking EV/EBITDA multiples over the long term shows a consistently wide discount between mid-market and large buyout deals (which today stands at around 5-6x).
This can in part be explained by the more favourable dry-powder situation in the mid-market. But this is also due to higher perceived risk in small and mid-sized deals, where smaller companies may be less diversified and professionalised. Small and mid-sized deals are also often sourced through proprietary networks rather than through competitive auctions.
Small and mid-sized funds have delivered higher returns than large funds
On average, small and mid-sized private equity funds have outperformed large private equity funds on a net total value paid in (TVPI) basis for vintages after 2005 and on a net internal rate of return (IRR) basis for vintages after 2009.
The outperformance is also demonstrated consistently across different geographic regions and investment strategies. Across Asia, North America and Europe, small- and mid-funds delivered higher net returns than large funds between 2000 and 2018. Small and mid venture, growth and buyout funds also outperformed their large counterparts.
Despite their attractive return profile, small- and mid-funds present a different risk profile compared to large funds. To assess this, we compared the inter-quartile ranges (IQR) of small and mid funds to that of large funds. Small and mid funds showed a wider IQR with higher top quartile and lower bottom quartile performance than large funds.
A practical consequence of this finding suggests that LPs should apply rigorous due diligence and fund-selection skills when selecting small- and mid-fund portfolios.
Small and mid-fund returns – more resilient through economic cycles and more persistent through fund vintages
We assessed returns by fund size during two recessionary periods: the Great Financial Crisis (2007-2009) and Dotcom bubble (2001). We found that small and mid funds delivered higher returns than large funds in terms of both net TVPI and net IRR.
Small- and mid-funds are also better at maintaining good performance over subsequent fund vintages than large funds. In 2022, we conducted research that showed evidence of persistence of returns in small and mid funds but not in large funds.
The research showed that the persistence of returns is greatest among small funds, strong and significant among medium-sized funds, but weak among large ones. In particular, 36% of small and mid private-equity funds that were top quartile in one vintage were top quartile in the GP’s next vintage. This is only 22% among large funds.
Broader, more attractive opportunity set
Investors have traditionally favoured large private equity funds. However, small and mid-sized funds have outperformed their large counterparts across different regions, investment strategies, and economic periods. This can be partly attributed to the fact that companies targeted by small and mid-sized funds often transact at lower valuation multiples.
They also offer greater potential for operational value creation and are attractive prospects for larger private-equity funds or strategic buyers seeking “tuck-in” investments.
Particularly in an era where large private-equity funds are flush with capital, we believe the small and mid-sized segment offers a broader and more attractive set of investment opportunities.