AOL News
SEARCH THE TIME ARCHIVE:
Magazine All of TIME.com
  Top Searches   Black History Month  Olympics  Covers 
   HOME
 > NATION
 > WORLD
 > BUSINESS
 > ARTS
 > HEALTH
 > EDUCATION
 > PHOTOS
 > MAGAZINE
 Current Issue
 Cover Story
 Letters
 Covers Gallery
 Search Archive
    -
 TIME Asia
 TIME Europe
 TIME Pacific
 TIME Canada
 TIME For Kids
    -
 Subscribe
 Cust Service
 > ARCHIVE
 > COLUMNISTS
 > SPECIALS
 > HELP DESK
 > SUBSCRIBE
 > LIFE Magazine
 > PERSON OF
     THE YEAR

 > OLYMPICS

Global Business
Managing VIP Money
Today's top financial boutiques offer private-equity funds and other goodies



Monday, Feb. 25, 2002
A lot of wealthy folks piled into venture-capital funds at the peak of tech mania two years ago, and they have seen nothing but red ink. Last year such funds declined about 40% on average. The other pillar of what's known as private equity--leveraged-buyout funds--has had problems too, losing about 20% in 2001. Together, these are the worst returns on record for an exclusive class that often carries investment minimums of $1 million for access to the best managers. When the game goes this bad, what's a well-heeled investor to do?

The short answer: hang tough. Boutique investment firms catering to the wealthy offer all kinds of fancy alternatives, from timberland and drilling partnerships to market-neutral and hedge funds to buying a vineyard in Italy. But the wisest course may be to hold your nose and reinvest in private equity.

LATEST COVER STORY
Good As Gold
Feb. 25, 2002

 

TIME IN-DEPTH
 Olympics 2002
 Black History Month
 Behind the Enron Scandal


PHOTO ESSAYS
Pictures of the Week
Olympic Photo Diary
Top Oscar Nominees


INTERACTIVE GRAPHICS
Skating: You Be the Judge
Play-by-Play: Pairs Skating
Breast Cancer: New Treatments


MORE STORIES
In-Depth: The Shoe Bomber's World
Arts: Color Crosses Over
Science: Here, Kitty, Kitty!


CNN.com: Breaking news

Yes, the stock market was a safer place to hide last year, when the S&P 500 fell 12%. But private equity has outperformed publicly traded stocks for the past three years, with an average annual return of 16.9% vs. 2.4% for the S&P 500; 10 years, 18.8% vs. 11.9%; and 20 years, 16.9% vs. 12.9%, Thomson Financial reports. Last year's losses, though, have been the focus. New cash flowing into private equity fell 43% last year. "A lot of people are still running," notes Stanley Pantowich, CEO of New York City-based TAG Associates. "I think it's time to get back into the fray." Venture-capital managers are doing just that. Last quarter they made more investments than in the previous quarter, for the first time in a year and a half, reports PricewaterhouseCoopers.

These managers view the recession as a classic opportunity to invest near the bottom--and with less money pouring in, those who do invest get better terms. Venture-capital managers who had been demanding fees equal to 30% of profits--up from the normal 20%--may not be so cocky going forward, notes Steven Galante, president of Asset Alternatives, a Wellesley, Mass., research firm. And for those who put their money in private equity, the corporate books allow the kind of transparency that stock-market investors crave post-Enron. To secure seed money for start-ups and spin-offs, companies grant private managers broad disclosure.

Wealthy individuals now have some $5 billion in private equity, less than 10% of a pie that remains dominated by pensions and endowments. An investor with less than $3 million may not get decent diversification, and advisers caution that private equity should be no more than 10% of a portfolio. "That level doesn't add a lot of overall risk but can juice returns," says Don Weigandt, a wealth adviser at J.P. Morgan Private Bank. The perfect candidate, then, is worth $30 million or more.

But even if that's out of your league, plenty of high-net worth advisers will work with you. Most require $100,000 to $1 million of investable money to open an account, and they will provide personalized tax service and mutual-fund investing. For VIP treatment, $10 million is the threshold. Firms usually charge about 1% of assets each year and negotiate down for larger portfolios.

What do you get? TAG, which counts as clients several Fortune 500 CEOs--will literally run the family finances, setting up cash flows to pay taxes, insurance, the gardener and vacation-home staff. It will also help you buy or sell a company and manage stock options. "We're in the business of our clients staying rich," says chairman Gary Fuhrman. That means minimizing risk through diversification and special vehicles like TAG's relative value arbitrage fund, which takes virtually no market risk yet profits by capturing tiny price discrepancies between, say, a company's convertible bonds and its common stock. That fund rose 10% amid last year's market slump.

Many boutique firms manage separate accounts for pairs trading, which minimizes market risk by, for instance, selling Lowe's and buying Home Depot. They will help you buy, lease or share a private jet and have intricate strategies for dealing with a large concentration of stock. Through an exchange fund, a single-stock millionaire may contribute stock to a diverse partnership. After seven years, the partnership unwinds and each partner gets a slice of a broad portfolio. That way the partners can diversify without the tax hit that comes from selling shares. Sometimes, as with private equity last year, the exclusive tools don't work right away. But in the long run they must--or the advisers are out of business.


Boutique Cash Managers Will:
--Pay your servants, alimony and other bills
--Run your vineyard
--Lease your jet
--Send money to your favorite charities
--Invest your money in a fund that goes up when the market falls
--Juice your returns through private equity
--Lock in stock-option gains without selling the stock
--Diversify your single-stock fortune without paying tax


SEARCH THE ARCHIVE

  

Magazine All of TIME.com




Search all back-issues of TIME since 1985 for TIME's unique perspective on history, people, and the most important events of the day.
GO TO THE ARCHIVE

See our most-popular articles





Copyright © 2002 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

FAQ | Site Map | Search | Contact Us
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Reprints & Permissions | Press Releases





February 25, 2002 Vol. 159 No. 8






GLOBAL BUSINESS
A Butler for Your Money
Boutique financial managers will handle your investments, pay your servants--even sell your vineyard

Global Briefing

Making Waves in Japan
A quiet U.S.-based venture fund is the talk of Tokyo, where it's on a $2.5 billion shopping spree

Asia's New Steel Tiger

STEEL RIPOFF
New efforts to protect aging mills from foreign competition are killing jobs among U.S. users of steel

Sweet Subsidy
Sweetheart deals for producers of sugar taste sour to businesses that need the stuff

Tequila Goes Global
Fancy, aged bottlings of the cactus-based liquor are winning fans around the world

A Trademark on Scallops?
Some farm groups try to claim exclusive use of names like "catfish" and "jasmine rice"

People to Watch