The S-Curve: Bending the J-Curve in Private Equity (2024)

The J-curve narrative in private equity (PE) investments has accompanied the growth of private markets up to the present. That narrative deserves a quiet obsolescence.

Here’s why.

The J-Curve

Private market funds tend not to be invested all up front. Rather investors contractually agree to supply the necessary capital to the investment manager, over time and upon request, to finance the acquisitions that compose the investment portfolio. Portfolio investments are not sold off all at once either but are divested over time, with the related cash proceeds then returned to investors.

The J-curve describes either a PE fund’s progressive performance, as measured by the internal rate of return (IRR), or the related net cash position of the investor. While it is indeed a function of how a PE fund uses cash over time, the J-curve is more often associated with the IRR narrative. By pointing to better future results, the J-curve’s story helps mitigate the usually unpleasant effect of the IRR’s initial downward plunge — related to the high relative weight, in the IRR calculation, of the expenses and fees incurred earlier in a PE fund’s lifecycle.

The S-Curve

But the J-curve narrative has always simplified an underlying sigmoid pattern: an S-curve.

How does the S-curve evolve the J-curve concept? By modeling the impact of decreasing marginal returns relative to the self-liquidating nature of private market transactions. In their various iterations, J-curves do not properly describe time’s influence on cash flows. Time has a financial cost that makes the more distant distributions progressively less relevant and leads to marginally decreasing returns.

Without a sigmoid correction, the J-curve may suggest that “patience” will lead to more money or higher returns and that the IRR reinvestment assumption will hold true.

To understand and manage the S-curve requires a duration-based and time-weighted performance calculation strategy. Duration marks where the J becomes an S and provides the interpretative and predictive shift that sharpens the pricing and risk management perspective.

S-Curve, So What?

Investors want to better understand the risk and return outlook of their private market allocations. They want to know how it compares to those of other asset classes. They also need to measure and manage their private market pacing and overcommitment strategy.

Ex post closet-indexing comparisons have limited practical application. Gauging the S-curves, however, yields actionable and quantifiable insights in terms of both benchmarking and returns.

The portfolio management possibilities of private market investments are more complex than those of more liquid asset classes. Equity portfolios, for example, can be efficiently constructed and are easier to rebalance. They eliminate the private markets’ funding and reinvestment risk as well as their target allocation challenges.

The J-curve narrative assumes annualized and chained IRRs, as do most current PE indices and metrics. Moreover, the time-weighted rate of returns (TWRs) computed using modified Dietz methods are really just proxies for the IRR. They deliver misleading performance information. Neglecting the de-risking effect of distributions is like attributing a value of Beta=1 to non-reinvested S&P 500 dividends: It biases the portfolio risk information.

To visualize the difference, the steeper line in the following graphic shows the return outlook of the money-weighted metrics currently in use. The more conservative line reflects the true average dollar creation over time by relying on S-curve and time-weightedduration-adjusted return on capital (DARC)information.

Competing Curves: The S-Curve vs. the J-Curve in Private Equity

The S-Curve: Bending the J-Curve in Private Equity (3)

The J-curve line represents capital growth if IRR returns were applicable to the whole commitment and reinvestment was instant. That requires a liquid market and fairly valued NAVs trading at par. The S-curve, on the other hand, models the true dollar creation of the private fund portfolio: It puts the IRR in the context of time in a realistic investment pacing and overcommitment framework.

The S-Curve: Bending the J-Curve in Private Equity (4)

The underlying thesis is supported by data. The long-term median IRR is 13.3%, according to McKinsey & Company, for example, but US pension funds reported long-term PE returns of 9.3%: A realistic steady-state overcommitment strategy of 1.4x would be broadly confirmed by the 1.5x since-inception net multiple earned by a large global PE investor.1

Of course, the performance numbers aren’t the whole story. Private market investing is about more than outperformance. The risk-adjusted contribution is equally essential. That can only be estimated with S-curves and DARC-weighted returns.

That’s why incorporating the de-risking effect of durations — where the S-curves twist — is critical to both accurate benchmarking and effective portfolio management.

1. A 1.5x multiple and a related 13.3% IRR imply a net duration of over 3.2 years, approximated by using the formula linking TVPI and IRR: DUR=ln (Multiple)/ ln (1+IRR). As the net duration is forward (i.e., it does not start at time zero), a reasonably standard three-year ramping up phase pushes the total duration to 6.2 years. In a simplified calculation, the 1.5x multiple is equivalent to the annualized 6.6% DARC return since inception (i.e., 1.5^(1/6.2)-1= 6.6%) and in turn to a 9.3% time-weighted return on the steady state invested capital, which requires a 1.4x overcommitment (i.e., only 71% of the commitment is typically invested, hence the DARC return of the fund is “leveraged” to compute the return of the invested capital, 6.6%/0.71=9.3%).

If you liked this post, don’t forget to subscribe to theEnterprising Investor.

All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the author’s employer.

Image credit: ©Getty Images / Photos by R A Kearton

Professional Learning for CFA Institute Members

CFA Institute members are empowered to self-determine and self-report professional learning (PL) credits earned, including content onEnterprising Investor. Members can record credits easily using theironline PL tracker.

The S-Curve: Bending the J-Curve in Private Equity (2024)

FAQs

The S-Curve: Bending the J-Curve in Private Equity? ›

But the J-curve narrative has always simplified an underlying sigmoid pattern: an S-curve. How does the S-curve evolve the J-curve concept? By modeling the impact of decreasing marginal returns relative to the self-liquidating nature of private market transactions.

What is the J-curve effect in private equity? ›

The term J-curve is used to describe the typical trajectory of investments made by a private equity firm. The J-curve is a visual representation of the plain fact that sometimes things will get worse before they get better.

What is the s-curve and J-curve? ›

Answer and Explanation:

A S-shaped population growth curve represents logistic growth, whereas a J-shaped curve represents exponential growth. In logistic growth, a population grows exponentially at first, but levels off as it reaches its carrying capacity.

What makes a J-curve flatten to an s-curve? ›

Final answer: The J curve flattens into an S curve when logistic growth begins due to limiting factors affecting the population.

What is the J-curve in private debt? ›

The J-curve reflects a situation where an investment has negative returns at first, for a period of time before then entering a period of recovery. At the beginning of a fund's life, during its investment phase, the fund draws capital from investors and fees are taken.

What does the J curve show impact of? ›

The J-curve effect refers to the phenomenon in which a country's balance of trade initially worsens after it devalues its currency or otherwise reduces its trade barriers. This occurs because the lower exchange rate makes imports more expensive, while exports become cheaper and more competitive in the global market.

How do you mitigate the J curve? ›

Diversifying across multiple vintages and asset classes helps investors use distributions from earlier investments to fund the capital calls of other ones. Building a self-funding portfolio can help investors mitigate the J-Curve effect and smooth out their cash flow needs.

What does an S-curve indicate? ›

How to explain an S-curve? An S-curve is a graph that plots the consumption of a resource over time. On the X-axis, the time is plotted, and on the Y-axis, the value or percentage of the resource. It tracks and controls the project and sees if the execution goes as planned.

What does the S-shaped curve represent? ›

Answer and Explanation: An S-shaped population curve represents logistic growth. The lower curve of the S is formed as a small population grows exponentially. The upper curve of the S is formed as the population nears its carrying capacity and its growth rate slows.

What is an S-curve in investing? ›

On the other hand, the S-Curve represents how businesses grow over time. Initially, growth could be faster as the company navigates its early challenges. As it gains traction, growth accelerates, forming a steep upward curve.

What is the purpose of flattening the curve? ›

Flattening-the-curve (FTC) refers to a strategy adopted to slow down and spread out the outbreak dynamics. FTC is a succinct way of communicating an important public health message that physical distancing and other public health measures will reduce the peak number of cases.

How do secondaries mitigate the J-curve? ›

In other words, by shortening the length and/or lowering the depth of the outflows and hastening inflows, secondary funds can diminish the initial J-curve of a private markets portfolio and offer cash back more quickly to the private markets investor.

What is the J-curve in private equity? ›

In private equity, the J Curve represents the tendency of private equity funds to post negative returns in the initial years and then post increasing returns in later years when the investments mature.

What is J-curve and S curve? ›

J-shaped curveS-shaped curve
1.It represents exponential growth .1.It represents a sigmoidal growth of the population
2.It has limited resources.2. It has unlimited resources.
3.It consists of lag and log phases .3.It also includes a deceleration phase.
1 more row

What are the benefits of the J-curve? ›

The J-Curve is a concept used in economics to explain the short-term negative impact of currency depreciation on a country's trade balance. It helps economists understand how a temporary decrease in exports can lead to long-term improvements as domestic industries become more competitive.

What does the J curve effect describe? ›

The J-curve effect is an economic and financial concept that describes the short-term negative impact of a devaluation or depreciation of a country's currency on its trade balance, followed by a longer-term improvement in the trade balance.

What is J-curve effect in BOP? ›

The J-curve effect suggests that after a currency depreciation, the current account balance will first fall for a period of time before beginning to rise as normally expected. If a country has a trade deficit initially, the deficit will first rise and then fall in response to a currency depreciation.

What is the significance of the J shaped growth curve? ›

J curve can be defined as the j shaped growth curve that graphically represents a situation in a new environment where the population density of an organism increases at an exponential rate.

What is the J curve expectations? ›

The J-curve hypothesis focuses on the rising and falling of the subjective expectations of individuals; however, research generally has made use of archival sources of data containing no direct measures of individual expectations.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Merrill Bechtelar CPA

Last Updated:

Views: 6126

Rating: 5 / 5 (70 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Merrill Bechtelar CPA

Birthday: 1996-05-19

Address: Apt. 114 873 White Lodge, Libbyfurt, CA 93006

Phone: +5983010455207

Job: Legacy Representative

Hobby: Blacksmithing, Urban exploration, Sudoku, Slacklining, Creative writing, Community, Letterboxing

Introduction: My name is Merrill Bechtelar CPA, I am a clean, agreeable, glorious, magnificent, witty, enchanting, comfortable person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.