This article defines Alternative Investments as asset classes beyond traditional stocks, bonds, and cash. They typically require higher minimum investments, longer holding periods, and are less liquid. Core types: (1) private equity (PE) – direct investment in private companies (buyouts, growth equity), (2) venture capital (VC) – early-stage, high-growth company funding, (3) hedge funds – pooled investment funds using diverse strategies (long/short, arbitrage, global macro). The article addresses: objectives of alternative investments; key concepts including carried interest, lock-up period, and high-water mark; core mechanisms such as GP/LP structure, capital calls, and fee models (2 and 20); international comparisons and debated issues (illiquidity premium, fee drag, retail access); summary and emerging trends (private credit, secondary market, democratization via fintech); and a Q&A section.
This article describes alternative investments without endorsing specific funds. Objectives commonly cited: higher returns potential, portfolio diversification, and access to private markets.
Key terminology:
Fee structures:
Investment time horizons:
| Type | Typical duration | Liquidity | Minimum investment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Venture capital | 10-12 years | Very illiquid | $1-5M+ |
| Private equity | 5-10 years | Illiquid | $1-10M+ |
| Hedge funds | 1-3 years (lock-up then periodic) | Quarterly or annual redemptions | $250k-1M |
Private equity strategies:
Venture capital stages:
Hedge fund strategies:
Regulation (accredited investor definition – US SEC):
Debated issues:
Summary: Alternatives offer diversification and potential outperformance but require long lock-ups, high minimums, and accredited status. 2-and-20 fee model common. J-curve (early returns negative). Retail access growing.
Emerging trends:
Q1: Do I need to be an accredited investor for all alternatives?
A: For most private funds, yes. Some interval funds and REITs are available to non-accredited investors (limits apply).
Q2: Why do pension funds invest in alternatives?
A: Seek higher returns than public markets, match long-term liabilities, and diversify. Endowment model (Yale) pioneered.
Q3: What is the J-curve in private equity?
A: Early years negative (fees + capital calls), later years positive as exits occur.
https://www.sec.gov/alternative-investments
https://www.investopedia.com/alternative-investments-4689730
https://www.institutionalinvestor.com/