Manager Contracts and Fees

Investment manager contracts outline the terms for managing investments, with a particular focus on liquidity provisions and fee structures. These elements significantly influence the suitability of a contract for the investor’s needs.


Liquidity

Pooled Investment Vehicles

  1. Closed-End Funds & ETFs:
    • Liquidity: Traded intra-day on exchanges, offering the highest liquidity.
    • Advantages: Investors can buy and sell shares throughout the trading day at market prices.
  2. Open-End Funds:
    • Liquidity: Transactions are based on end-of-day NAV.
    • Advantages: High liquidity but limited to daily redemption.
  3. Limited Partnership Structures (e.g., hedge funds, private equity, venture capital):
    • Liquidity Terms:
      • Redemption Frequency: Specifies how often withdrawals are allowed (e.g., monthly, quarterly).
      • Notification Period: Time required to notify the manager before redemption.
      • Lockup Period: Time after the initial investment during which redemptions are restricted.
        • Hard Lock: No redemptions allowed.
        • Soft Lock: Redemptions allowed for a fee.
      • Gates: Caps on the amount redeemable during a specific period.
    • Private Equity/Venture Capital:
      • Liquidity: Lowest among all structures.
      • Capital Calls: Investors commit capital and receive returns typically after 5+ years, with fund life often extending up to 12 years.
    • Advantages:
      • Enables long-term investment horizons.
      • Reduces the risk of overreacting to short-term volatility.
      • Allows managers to earn illiquidity premiums by holding illiquid assets.
    • Disadvantages:
      • Limits flexibility to adjust portfolio allocations in response to market changes.
      • Reduces ability to meet sudden liquidity demands.

Separately Managed Accounts (SMAs)

  • Liquidity: Determined by the underlying assets’ liquidity.
  • Advantages: Greater flexibility as securities can be sold at any time, subject to market conditions.

Management Fees

Fee Structures

  1. Mutual Fund Fees:
    • Typically based on Assets Under Management (AUM).
    • May require minimum balances.
    • Fee options:
      • Fixed dollar amounts.
      • Percentage of assets.
    • Advantages:
      • Aligns with the manager’s skill in growing the asset base.
      • Declining percentage fees for larger accounts reduce investor costs.
    • Disadvantages:
      • Luck can influence short-term AUM growth.
      • Managers may focus on asset retention rather than taking beneficial risks for investors (e.g., favoring safe strategies like indexing).
  2. Performance-Based Fees:
    • Fees tied to achieving specific investment returns.
    • Advantages:
      • Aligns manager and investor interests by rewarding performance.
    • Disadvantages:
      • May incentivize excessive risk-taking.
      • Investors may end up overpaying for luck rather than skill.

Fee Misalignment

  • Principal-Agent Misalignment:
    • Investors (principals) and managers (agents) may have differing goals:
      • Time Horizons: Disagreement on short-term versus long-term strategies.
      • Risk Tolerance: Investors may prefer managers to take calculated risks, while managers may prefer safer approaches to retain assets.
    • Transparency Issues:
      • Investors may not fully understand the manager’s processes or workload.
    • Luck vs. Skill:
      • Performance-based fees risk rewarding managers for favorable market conditions rather than skill.

Conclusion

Investment manager contracts must strike a balance between liquidity and fee structures to align with investor needs. Highly liquid vehicles like ETFs and open-end funds suit investors needing frequent access to capital. Limited partnership structures are better for long-term investors willing to trade liquidity for potentially higher returns through illiquidity premiums. Fee structures, whether AUM-based or performance-based, should incentivize managers to act in the best interest of investors while being mindful of misalignment risks and the role of luck in returns.

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