CFA Level 1 – Alternative Investments
Categories, Characteristics & Compensation Structures
What Are Alternative Investments
Traditional Investments
- Long-only positions in:
- Stocks
- Bonds
- Cash
These dominate most retail portfolios and are highly regulated and liquid.
Alternative Investments
A broader set of assets and strategies that fall outside traditional long-only securities.
Grouped into:
- Private Capital
- Real Assets
- Hedge Funds
Analogy:
Traditional investments are like public highways — regulated, visible, and accessible.
Alternatives are private roads — harder to access, less regulated, but sometimes faster or more profitable.
General Characteristics of Alternative Investments
Alternative investments share several defining features:
- Narrow management specialization
- Low correlation with traditional assets
- Less regulation and transparency
- Limited historical data
- Unique legal and tax considerations
- Higher fees
- Concentrated portfolios
- Restrictions on redemptions
Why Institutions Like Alternatives
- Portfolio diversification
- Potential for higher risk-adjusted returns
- Inflation protection (real assets)
- Access to illiquidity premiums
Methods of Investing in Alternative Assets
A. Fund Investing
Definition:
Investor contributes capital to a fund, and the fund manager invests on the investor’s behalf.
Pros
- Access to manager expertise
- Low investor involvement
- Built-in diversification
- Lower minimum capital requirements
Cons
- Highest cost (management + incentive fees)
- Requires fund-level due diligence
- Lock-ups restrict liquidity
Analogy:
Like hiring a professional chef — you get expertise, but you pay for it and don’t control the menu.
B. Co-Investing
Definition:
Investor:
- Invests in the fund and
- Invests directly in assets identified by the fund
Pros
- Lower management fees
- Learn from fund’s investment process
- More active involvement
- Stronger relationship with fund managers
Cons
- Less control over asset selection
- Adverse selection risk
- Requires more time and expertise
Analogy:
You’re allowed into the kitchen — but the chef still decides what’s cooked.
C. Direct Investing
Definition:
Investor makes a direct investment in the asset without an intermediary.
Pros
- No management fees
- Maximum flexibility
- Full control over decisions
Cons
- Requires deep expertise
- High minimum capital
- Less diversification
- No access to fund networks
Analogy:
You build the house yourself — no contractor fees, but full responsibility.
Partnership Structure in Alternative Funds
Most alternative funds are structured as limited partnerships.
Limited Partners (LPs)
- Provide committed capital
- Liability limited to capital invested
- Passive investors
General Partners (GPs)
- Manage the fund
- Make investment decisions
- Unlimited liability
- Earn:
- Management fees
- Performance (incentive) fees
Compensation Structures & Key Terms
Management Fee
- Based on committed capital
- Paid regardless of performance
- Covers operating costs
Performance (Incentive) Fee
- Paid only if returns exceed a threshold
- Aligns GP and LP interests
Hurdle Rates
Hard Hurdle Rate (HHR)
- Performance fee applies only to returns above the hurdle
- Example:
- 8% hurdle → fees charged only on returns above 8%
Analogy:
GP only gets a bonus if they exceed the sales target — and only on the excess.
Soft Hurdle Rate (SHR)
- If return exceeds hurdle → incentive fee applies to all profits
Analogy:
Once the target is hit, the bonus applies retroactively to the entire year.
High Water Mark (HWM)
- The highest fund value previously achieved
- Incentive fees only charged on new profits
Purpose:
Prevents GPs from earning fees twice on the same performance.
Waterfall Structures
Whole-of-Fund (European) Waterfall
- Performance fees paid only after LPs recover:
- Initial investment
- Required return
LP-friendly structure
Deal-by-Deal (American) Waterfall
- Performance fees collected per deal
- GPs earn fees earlier
GP-friendly but riskier for LPs
Clawback Provision
- Allows LPs to reclaim excess incentive fees
- Used when later losses reveal overpayment to GPs
Analogy:
A year-end bonus adjustment if earlier bonuses were too generous.
Summary Tables
Alternative vs Traditional Investments
| Feature | Traditional | Alternative |
|---|---|---|
| Liquidity | High | Low |
| Regulation | High | Low |
| Fees | Low | High |
| Transparency | High | Limited |
| Correlation | High | Low |
Investment Methods Comparison
| Method | Fees | Control | Expertise Required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fund Investing | High | Low | Low |
| Co-Investing | Medium | Medium | Medium |
| Direct Investing | Low | High | High |
Hurdle & Waterfall Compensations
| Feature | Hard Hurdle | Soft Hurdle |
|---|---|---|
| Fee Applies To | Excess returns only | All returns |
| LP Friendly | More | Less |
Key Takeaways
- Alternative investments differ mainly in liquidity, fees, and transparency
- They provide diversification due to low correlation
- Fund investing is easiest but most expensive
- Direct investing offers control but requires expertise
- LPs provide capital; GPs manage and earn fees
- Hard hurdles protect LPs more than soft hurdles
- High water marks prevent double-charging
- European waterfalls favor LPs; American favor GPs
- Clawbacks protect LPs from premature GP payouts
Performance Calculation and Appraisal
Why Performance Evaluation is Difficult for Alternatives
Alternative investments differ from traditional assets, making standard performance metrics less reliable.
Key Performance Evaluation Issues
- Limited transparency
- Illiquidity
- Complex structures and fees
- Asymmetric return profiles
- Redemption restrictions
- Valuation uncertainty
Analogy:
Evaluating alternatives is like judging a movie before the ending — incomplete information distorts conclusions.
Why Traditional Metrics May Fail
Traditional performance measures assume:
- Frequent pricing
- Liquid markets
- Symmetric returns
These assumptions do not hold for many alternative investments.
Traditional Performance Metrics (Still Used, with Caution)
Sharpe Ratio
Measures:
Return per unit of total riskSharpe Ratio=σpRp−Rf
- Penalizes upside and downside volatility equally
- Less useful for skewed return distributions
Sortino Ratio
Measures:
Return per unit of downside riskSortino Ratio=σdRp−RMAR
- Focuses only on harmful volatility
- Better suited for asymmetric returns
MAR Ratio
Measures:
Annualized return relative to maximum drawdownMAR Ratio=Maximum DrawdownAnnual Return
Calmar Ratio
Measures:
Annual return relative to max drawdown over past 3 yearsCalmar Ratio=Max Drawdown (3 yrs)Annual Return
⚠️ CFA Rule:
For all ratios above → Higher is better
Private Equity Performance Evaluation
J-Curve Effect
- Early years:
- Capital outflows
- Fees
- Limited exits
- Later years:
- Positive cash inflows as investments exit
Analogy:
Like planting an orchard — early costs with no fruit, then harvest years later.
Why Short-Term Metrics Fail
- Negative early returns distort ratios
- Illiquidity masks true performance
- NAV estimates dominate early valuations
Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
Most common PE performance metric
- Incorporates timing of cash flows
- Highly sensitive to:
- Financing rate assumptions for capital calls
- Reinvestment rate assumptions for distributions
Multiple of Invested Capital (MOIC)
- Measures total value created
- Ignores timing of cash flows
CFA Insight:
IRR measures speed of returns, MOIC measures magnitude.
Real Estate Performance Metrics
Capitalization Rate (Cap Rate)
Where:
- NOI = Rental income − operating expenses
Interpretation:
- Higher cap rate → higher income yield (and often higher risk)
Analogy:
Cap rate is like a rental property’s “earnings yield.”
Hedge Fund Performance Evaluation
Leverage Effects
- Leverage magnifies:
- Gains
- Losses
- Makes volatility and tail risk more severe
Redemption Constraints
- Lock-up periods
- Notice periods
- Gates
These restrict investor liquidity and complicate evaluation.
Valuation Challenges
- Liquid securities: use market prices
- Illiquid securities: use quoted prices or valuation models
Model Risk
- Smoothing returns
- Overstating performance
- Understating volatility
Analogy:
Using models can make returns look “too smooth” — like editing out the bumps in a roller coaster.
Fees and Performance Measurement
Management Fees
- Applied to all assets under management (AUM)
- Charged regardless of performance
Performance (Incentive) Fees
Designed to align GP/manager incentives with investors
Applied only to profits
Summary Tables
Performance Metrics by Asset Class
| Asset Class | Common Metric |
|---|---|
| Private Equity | IRR, MOIC |
| Real Estate | Cap Rate |
| Hedge Funds | Sharpe, Sortino, Drawdown Ratios |
Risk-Adjusted Ratios
| Ratio | Focus |
|---|---|
| Sharpe | Total volatility |
| Sortino | Downside risk |
| MAR | Max drawdown |
| Calmar | Recent drawdown |
Key Takeaways
- Alternative investments are harder to evaluate due to illiquidity and opacity
- Traditional metrics can mislead due to asymmetric returns
- Sharpe ratio penalizes upside volatility
- Sortino ratio is better for downside risk
- Private equity returns follow a J-curve
- IRR depends heavily on reinvestment assumptions
- MOIC ignores timing but shows total value
- Cap rate measures real estate income yield
- Hedge fund valuation models may smooth returns
- Management fees apply to all AUM; incentive fees apply only to profits
Private Capital, Real Estate, Infrastructure, Natural Resources & Hedge Funds
Private Capital
Definition
Capital raised outside public markets, typically through private funds.
A. Private Equity (PE)
- Equity ownership in private firms or public firms taken private
- Typical holding period: ~5 years
- Goal: operational improvement + exit at higher valuation
1. Leveraged Buyouts (LBOs)
- Acquisition funded largely with borrowed money
- Debt becomes part of firm’s capital structure
- Leverage magnifies returns and risk
Types
- Management Buyout (MBO): Existing management acquires firm
- Management Buy-In (MBI): External management replaces current team
Analogy:
Buying a house mostly with a mortgage — leverage boosts gains if prices rise.
2. Venture Capital (VC)
Investments in high-growth, high-risk companies
Formative (Early) Stage
- Angel Investing
- Idea stage
- Business plan & market analysis
- Seed Stage
- Product development
- Early marketing
- Early-Stage Financing
- Before full production/sales
Later Stage
- After production and sales
- Prior to IPO
- Capital used for expansion
Mezzanine Stage
- Pre-IPO financing
- Prepares firm for public markets
Analogy:
VC is like nurturing a startup from idea → prototype → scaling → IPO.
3. Growth Capital
- Minority equity stake
- Invests in established but growing firms
- Funds used for:
- Expansion
- Restructuring
- New markets
- Acquisitions
Exit Strategies (Highly Testable)
Trade Sale
- Sell to another company
- Pros: fast, immediate cash, synergies
- Cons: limited buyers, management resistance
IPO
- Go public
- Pros: highest potential price, publicity
- Cons: high costs, long timeline, disclosure, lockups
SPAC
- Merge with publicly traded shell company
- Pros: fixed valuation, flexible structure
- Cons: dilution, redemptions, sponsor fees
Other Exits
- Recapitalization (dividends via leverage)
- Secondary sale (to another PE firm)
- Write-off / liquidation
B. Private Debt
Debt financing provided to non-public firms
Types
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Direct Lending | Loans to firms unable to borrow from banks |
| Mezzanine Debt | Subordinate, often unsecured |
| Venture Debt | Debt for early-stage firms |
| Distressed Debt | Buy debt of troubled firms |
| Unitranche | Blended senior & subordinated debt |
Real Estate
Core Features
- Rental income + capital appreciation
- Inflation hedge
- Low correlation with traditional assets
Unique Characteristics
- Large capital requirements
- Illiquidity
- Property uniqueness
- Fixed location
- Requires professional management
Categories
Residential
- Single-family, multi-family
- Typically leveraged
Commercial
- Offices, retail, warehouses
- Rental income focus
REITs (Very Testable)
- Pool investor capital
- Invest in real estate
- Avoid double taxation
- Types:
- Equity REITs
- Mortgage REITs
Real Estate Indexes
- Appraisal indexes
- Repeat sales indexes
- REIT indexes
Forms of Real Estate Investing
| Method | Features |
|---|---|
| Direct | Control + tax benefits, high expertise |
| Indirect | Funds, REITs, mortgages |
| Mortgages | Fixed cash flows, prepayment risk |
| Private Funds | Open-end, infinite life |
| REITs | Liquid, diversified income |
Real Estate Risks
- Economic cycles
- Interest rates
- Regulation
- Unexpected costs
- Leverage risk
Infrastructure
Definition
Long-lived, capital-intensive assets providing essential public services
Categories
Economic Infrastructure
- Transportation (roads, airports)
- Utilities & energy
- Telecom & data centers
Social Infrastructure
- Schools
- Hospitals
Stage of Development
| Stage | Risk |
|---|---|
| Brownfield | Lower, stable cash flows |
| Greenfield | Higher risk, higher return |
Infrastructure Risks
- Demand risk
- Operational risk
- Construction risk
- Financing risk
- Regulatory & political risk
- Currency & tax risk
Natural Resources
Commodities
Standardized physical products
Types
- Hard: oil, metals
- Soft: agricultural products
Pricing Relationship
- Contango:
- Backwardation: F0
Investment Methods
- Direct ownership
- Derivatives (futures, options)
- Indexes
- ETPs
- Managed futures
- Commodity funds
Benefits
- Diversification
- Inflation protection
- Return potential
Digital Commodities
- Blockchain-based assets
- Include tokens and virtual currencies
Timberland
- Income from timber sales
- Acts as:
- Factory (tree growth)
- Warehouse (storage)
Returns
- Biological growth
- Commodity prices
- Land appreciation
Farmland
- Crop/livestock production
- Returns from:
- Harvest sales
- Commodity prices
- Land appreciation
Hedge Funds
Event-Driven
- Merger arbitrage
- Distressed
- Activism
- Special situations
Relative Value
- Convertible bond arbitrage
- Fixed income arbitrage
- ABS
- Volatility strategies
Macro
- Top-down economic bets
- Interest rates, FX, inflation
Equity Hedge
- Long/short equity
- Market neutral
- Growth
- Value
- Short-biased
- Sector-specific
Summary Tables
Alternative Asset Classes
| Asset | Key Return Driver |
|---|---|
| Private Equity | Operational improvement |
| Real Estate | Income + appreciation |
| Infrastructure | Stable cash flows |
| Commodities | Price changes |
| Hedge Funds | Strategy execution |
Key Takeaways
- Private capital operates outside public markets
- PE returns enhanced via leverage and active management
- VC investments follow firm life-cycle stages
- Exit strategy choice critically affects returns
- Real estate offers income, diversification, inflation hedge
- Infrastructure provides stable, long-term cash flows
- Commodity prices driven by storage, convenience yield
- Contango vs backwardation affects futures returns
- Hedge funds use leverage, short selling and complex strategies
- Fund-of-funds improve access but add fees
