Rich people have trillions of dollars they want to give to hedge funds
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Goldman Sachs says that trillions of private wealth assets are eager to invest in hedge funds.
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Hedge funds long favored pensions and endowments over private wealth.
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With institutions tied up in illiquid private funds, the wealthy could be hedge funds’ new fundraising focus.
The $5 trillion hedge fund industry is backed by some of the biggest pools of money in the world — pensions, endowments, and sovereign wealth funds.
But those big-name institutions are facing a cash crunch thanks to capital tied up in illiquid private equity and venture funds. For hedge funds looking to grow, there are trillions of dollars outside the institutions wanting in on the action, according to Goldman Sachs.
Private wealth — which refers to money held on platforms run by the private banking divisions of places like Goldman as well as wealth advice giants like Merrill Lynch, independent advisors, and family offices — is eager to invest in hedge funds and has plenty of capital to put to work.
Goldman’s report estimates that less than $500 billion of the $50.7 trillion of private wealth assets are in hedge funds. If this segment of capital followed the recommendation of chief investment officers from these platforms and family offices for hedge fund exposure, there would be more than $4 trillion in hedge fund investments — close to the industry’s total assets.
“Even closing 10% of this gap would double the current assets” that private wealth has in hedge funds, Goldman’s report states.
There have been big-name managers that have already tapped this space. Millennium has sold LP stakes in its flagship fund via private bank advisors and offered a piece of its business to wealthy clients of banks like Goldman, Morgan Stanley, and UBS. Jain Global tapped the private wealth channel for capital before launching in mid-2024. Coatue and Tiger Global count platforms like JPMorgan’s private bank as investors.
The channel is hungriest for more hedge fund exposure, according to Goldman’s report. A survey done by the bank’s capital introduction team found that 68% of private bank advisors and RIAs wanted to increase their hedge fund bets this year, while only 4% intended to cut them. Meanwhile, only 31% of pension and insurance investors wanted to put more into hedge funds. For endowments, foundations, and sovereign wealth funds, it was even worse — 30% wanted to increase hedge fund exposure while 14% wanted less.
For years, private wealth managers shunned hedge funds, which were perceived to have high fees and middling performance.

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