Fund Management
Private Capital Funds Face $5.5 Billion Performance Reporting Bill - Study

The sum shows how many resources are used in reporting timely data on investment performance to clients, a crucial area for the wealth management industry and an important driver of fintech spending.
Managers of private capital funds will have to fork out around
$5.5 billion in the next five years to satisfy investor demands
for performance data, shedding light on how client reporting
remains a major concern in financial services, a new report
said.
Private capital funds in China face growing demands for
transparency as mainstream investors increasingly turn to the
sector to chase the higher returns it offers, research from
Netherlands-listed Intertrust shows.
“For LPs in China, ‘performance’ is more than just returns. They
want updates on KPIs such as cash or debt levels, daily sales or
rent arrears and SLAs, all of which show how a business is being
run in a complex market. GPs [general partners] must focus more
than ever on giving LPs the reassurance that comes with good
information. This is only good investor relations at a time when
there are immense opportunities in China and they need to
increasingly compete for additional capital commitments,” James
Donnan, regional MD, Asia-Pacific at Intertrust Group, said.
Its study, called The future private capital CFO: Evolving in
a digital age and created in partnership with Global
Custodian, shows that chief financial officers at private capital
funds in China expect their limited partners to demand more
frequent data updates over the next few years.
High-quality, easy-to-understand reporting, wealth management
practitioners say, is often a way for the industry to gain an
edge in a field where so many offerings are increasingly
commoditised.
A global sample of more than 300 chief financial officers at
private capital funds were surveyed between 20 November 2020 and
26 January 2021, including 54 in China.
In China, eight out of 10 (80 per cent) of respondents to
Intertrust’s study expect investors to seek live or daily
portfolio performance information and 71 expcted such
spending on operational service level agreements. More
than half (58 per cent) of the CFOs in China (57 per cent
globally) expect a need for daily or live updates on
cybersecurity and 40 per cent (51 per cent globally) on
environmental, social and corporate governance.
China’s CFOs expect that higher priority will be placed on
portfolio performance and SLAs than their peers elsewhere: 64 per
cent and 50 per cent of CFOs globally anticipate live or daily
updates will be required for these respectively.