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Does anyone work in PE? Have access to co-invest?

Posted on 3/17/26 at 6:13 am
Posted by blackoutdore
Nashville
Member since Jun 2013
265 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 6:13 am
Taking a new position with a PE firm (not a member of the investment team), and have been told that I have the option to co-invest in their next funds (which don’t close until a few more months). I have very much been a boring index fund investor who has focused on tax advantaged accounts and paying off student loans, but this option may change my approach.

I am seeking advice from others on how they think about co-invest. Carry may become an option with another promo (2yr horizon), but that’s currently off the table. Secondly, during the interview process one of the partners mentioned that they offer 0% interest loans for co-invest, with payment not due until fund exit (or you leave). I realize that loan is handcuffing me to a job, but the leverage is attractive.

This firm has had some of the best returns in PE over the past decade - TBD if they can keep it up.


I’m thinking about throwing $X amount into the funds, let it ride until the fund closes, and hopefully $X goes to $Y. Before doubling down with $Y for the next funds, I would calculate what $X would have yielded me in a more vanilla portfolio, and take $X plus its vanilla yield (or just the yield) off the table and back into my normal brokerage.

Currently no kids, and wife has a stable, high paying medical field position that is not under AI threat anytime soon, so we have the flexibility to deal with an illiquid position.
Posted by TigahsOnTop
Member since Nov 2022
208 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 7:22 am to
This obviously is totally dependent on the strategy.

Some PE funds are built for institutions, so their strategies may not be as nimble or alpha seeking as those built for small family offices.

In general, I almost always invest when I get GP terms (I assume you aren't paying management fee/carry). A lot of private funds are not outperforming (they are just increasing beta, while grabbing a small illiquidity premium). That is NET of fees (gross of fees, most of them DO outperform, so that is why I'd probably advise you to coinvest).

Hard to give a true assessment with no background knowledge of the fund.
Posted by Texas Tea 123
Member since Sep 2017
316 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 8:57 am to
What's the fund size / firm AUM?
Posted by el Gaucho
He/They
Member since Dec 2010
58918 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 9:03 am to
I think Pedro teaches gym
Posted by blackoutdore
Nashville
Member since Jun 2013
265 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 10:53 am to
Firm has ~$17B in AUM. Focus is on micro cap, about half of funds are in the healthare industry, with the other half spread across a few differnet industries.

No management fees for co-invest.

Happy to provide additional details.
Posted by TigahsOnTop
Member since Nov 2022
208 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 12:33 pm to
quote:

Firm has ~$17B in AUM. Focus is on micro cap, about half of funds are in the healthare industry, with the other half spread across a few different industries.


17B spread across how many funds? What is the fund size that you would be investing in?

17B seems like a considerable amount of AUM for a LMM PE firm (which I actually see as a bad thing).

What is the GP commitment as a % of the fund? You can usually find that number in the PPM or fundraising deck,
Posted by whodatigahbait
Uptown
Member since Oct 2007
1848 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 4:19 pm to
quote:

Firm has ~$17B in AUM. Focus is on micro cap, about half of funds are in the healthare industry, with the other half spread across a few differnet industries.

No management fees for co-invest.

Happy to provide additional details.


Shore Capital.
Posted by Big Scrub TX
Member since Dec 2013
39589 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 5:02 pm to
quote:

Firm has ~$17B in AUM. Focus is on micro cap
Define micro cap.
Posted by Big Scrub TX
Member since Dec 2013
39589 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 5:03 pm to
quote:

Shore Capital.
Ah. They have grown too much IMO.
Posted by Free888
Member since Oct 2019
3164 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 5:14 pm to
Wasn’t invested in PE, but was invested in a hedge fund. Got tired of waiting/dealing with K-1’s during tax season, and the return vs index funds wasn’t worth the hassle.
Posted by TigahsOnTop
Member since Nov 2022
208 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 5:20 pm to
quote:

Ah. They have grown too much IMO.


100% agreed with Big Scrub (assuming it actually is Shore Capital)
Posted by TigahsOnTop
Member since Nov 2022
208 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 5:23 pm to
quote:

Wasn’t invested in PE, but was invested in a hedge fund.


Hedge funds suck for the most part, but there are certainly exceptions to the rule. I’ve had a few big winners (all of which had ultra tiny fund sizes so they were actually able to capitalize on market inefficiencies).

It’s nearly impossible to create alpha while putting billions of dollars of capital to work.
Posted by Big Scrub TX
Member since Dec 2013
39589 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 5:43 pm to
quote:

I’m thinking about throwing $X amount into the funds, let it ride until the fund closes,
I mean, this is 10-12 years, right (per fund)?
Posted by blackoutdore
Nashville
Member since Jun 2013
265 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 6:00 pm to
Yep it’s Shore.
Posted by Azazello
Member since Sep 2011
3231 posts
Posted on 3/17/26 at 7:24 pm to
I work in PE on an investment team.

Personally, I wouldn’t co-invest. The ROI isn’t worth locking up your funds for that long. Life changes fast when you’re under 40 and I place a large premium on liquidity.

If this is a lotto ticket, go for it. Remember, past performance is not indicative of future returns. PE is a really long game.

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