Alt Investments
JP Morgan AM Launches "Evergreen" US Fund

The fund is an example of a shift in the way private market assets are held, favoring an open-ended structure that avoids, so advocates say, complexities and liquidity issues around capital calls, defined exit dates, and more.
JP Morgan’s asset management group has launched a private markets
fund that takes an “evergreen” form open for qualified and
accredited clients, as defined under US regulations.
Investors can enter the fund for at least $25,000. There are no
capital calls, and there is a potential for quarterly liquidity,
JP Morgan
Asset Management said.
The fund is available on select private bank and custodial
platforms and its availability will be expanded in 2024, the US
firm said in a statement.
Evergreen funds, also known as perpetual funds, or
“perps,” are open-ended fund structures with no termination
date. They can recycle capital from realized returns and aren’t
bound by the same time constraints as other private market
investment vehicles. (See stories from Hamilton Lane and
Blackstone, here
and
here.)
The firm’s private equity group oversees a total of $30 billion
in assets under management.
"The launch of JPMF aligns with our long-term vision to lead the
global democratization of alternatives, building on our offerings
across real estate, real assets, hedge funds and liquid
alternatives," Anton Pil, global head of alternatives, JP Morgan
Asset Management, said. "Private equity has traditionally been
difficult for individuals to access, so we're thrilled to deliver
our institutional-grade private equity investment expertise to
this investor base through JPMF."