Conference

LPEA Insights


Join Enkela Kosturi, Bruno Bagnouls and Antonis Anastasiou at the LPEA Insights Conference in Luxembourg on 19 October to learn more about Luxembourg’s investment landscape for private equity. Connect with them at the conference as they meet leading GPs and LPs to discuss the best practices for fundraising, creating investor relations teams, and the unique opportunities Luxembourg holds for private equity.

Schedule a meeting with them ahead of the conference using their contact details below to learn more about Alter Domus’ comprehensive solutions for private equity managers.

Key contacts

Bruno Bagnouls

Bruno Bagnouls

Luxembourg

Head of SPV Solutions and Luxembourg Business Development Leader

Antonis Anastasiou

Antonis Anastasiou

Luxembourg

Head of Corporate SPV & Regulatory Services

Enkela Kosturi

Enkela Kosturi

Luxembourg

Director, Sales & Relationship Management

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Conference

Pension & Investment’s World Pension Summit


Angela Summonte is attending Pension & Investment’s World Pension Summit in The Hague from 10-12 October. She will join a range of pension fund executives and other industry experts to discuss the best practices and key strategies driving growth for pension funds around the world. Meet her at the conference to learn more about how changes across technology, financial markets, the environment, and society are transforming opportunities, and how Alter Domus is supporting the evolution of the sector.

Get in touch with Angela ahead of the summit to find out how Alter Domus’ Asset Owner Solutions can support your ambitions.

Key contacts

Angela Summonte

Angela Summonte

Luxembourg

Group Director, Key Accounts

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Conference

SuperReturn CFO/COO


Patrick McCullagh along with Tim Trott will share their perspectives on some of the most pressing topics impacting today’s private equity landscape at the SuperReturn CFO/COO conference in Amsterdam from 2-4 October. Join Patrick and Tim at the three-day conference to gain the latest insights on the regulatory, fundraising, technology, and ESG trends shaping global private equity markets.

Tim Trott will take the stage at the conference to navigate through the intricacies, challenges, and opportunities tied to the QAHC regime during the “The QAHC Regime: A Closer Look at the UK” group discussion on 2 October.

Patrick will explore how firms can optimize operations simply by using technology and how this is impacting the private equity landscape while moderating the “Let’s talk about tech” panel on 3 October at 10:10am CET.

Learn more about Alter Domus’ award-winning private equity solutions and how they can support your business by contacting Patrick and Tim ahead of the conference.

Key contacts

Patrick McCullagh

Patrick McCullagh

United Kingdom

Managing Director, Sales, Europe & United States

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News

Accelerating data collection in a turbulent and ESG-conscious market

Trends in the sovereign wealth fund industry introduce new challenges, calling on data collection to guide the way


technology colleagues analyzing data stairwell

What facilities of data collection do you believe will become prevalent in a more stringent market?

While navigating the extreme volatility in the current market, data collection facilities will be geared toward traversing three key mega trends. The first is the emerging convergent industry model. The financial, administrative, and advisory sectors are morphing together to create a new business model that will require a more integration-based approach to data collection.

Secondly, sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) are looking to shift more in private equity investment. This transition will demand greater due diligence around compliance and guidelines.

Finally, ESG conditions are becoming an important facet of SWF investing. As such, many firms have set out to eliminate their carbon emissions by 2050. All these trends require an evolved level of data analysis that will set the course for data collection in the future.

How can clients utilize and incorporate data to navigate market turbulence, particularly vehicles with lower-risk tolerances like SWFs?

Future data collection will need to introduce a new tool kit, ensuring data is not only collected, but organized in a way that can be assessed efficiently and offers investment insights. New technologies will play a big part, helping to deliver a deeper form of data retention. The industry demands data-driver models that incorporate traditional and non-traditional research sources. For example, social media can now serve as an insightful resource. Moreover, the industry must look for ways to blend machine learning, such as AI, and human efforts. These practices work best when automation is performed with AI to optimize data gathering, and then humans weigh in on analysis.

Can sustainability extend to data collection? If so, how do these changes vary for funds with more robust regulations?

Sustainability initiatives are challenging for more regulated clients, such as SWFs. Now, information linking ESG resources and financial performance lacks consistency and transparency. We see many initiatives around regulations to establish more transparency and even create a potential benchmark.

One initiative is ESG data convergence, which would demand both GPs and LPs agree to report and collect the same ESG metrics, from board diversity to carbon emissions. Ultimately, it is a matter of defining the data points that can be collected and monitored in the same way, then normalizing them. It isn’t easy, but there is a lot of attention around the topic.

What impact do you envision this form of sustainability practice having on the private sector as a whole, or the data collection industry specifically?

Data collection around ESG will influence other sectors by providing comparable information to the private sector and establishing a coherent marketing approach. These sustainability practices will also need to be specific to the client. The same data points won’t be relevant across all strategies in the private sector. It will be about identifying which data points are relevant to the specific underlying assets.

This article was originally published in Preqin’s Sovereign Wealth Funds Report.

Key contacts

Angela Summonte

Angela Summonte

Luxembourg

Group Director, Key Accounts

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Alter Domus wins Fund Administration: ManCo Services

The Drawdown Awards ceremony took place on June 7th in London


Alter Domus team at Drawdown Awards 2023

We are delighted to announce that Alter Domus has won the award for Fund Administration: ManCo Services at The Drawdown Awards 2023. Held in London on June 7th, the awards were judged by a highly experienced panel of leading industry experts and we faced strong competition in our category.

The award was accepted by Matthew Molton— Country Executive UK— on the night, with Andy Clark, Tim Trott and Sam Wade also present to celebrate our achievement. We are particularly proud that this award was given by a panel of leading GP and LP judges.

We are delighted to win this prestigious award, which reflects the quality of the services we provide and the trust our clients have in Alter Domus as their chosen ManCo provider.

Matthew Molton, Country Executive UK

This is the second consecutive year that Alter Domus has won the award for ManCo Services at The Drawdown Awards, following our previous win in 2022.

This news follows hot on the heels of Alter Domus being ranked one of the top-5 third-party AIFMs, and a top-10 third-party ManCo in PwC’s 2023 Observatory for Management Companies Barometer.

Key contacts

Matthew Molton

Matthew Molton

United Kingdom

Country Executive United Kingdom

Andy Clark

Andy Clark

United Kingdom

Director, Sales & Relationship Management

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Why advanced tech is the future of private markets

Firms that integrate advanced technologies into their investment decision-making processes will be better able to compete in the alternatives marketplace, says Alter Domus’ Head of Data & Analytics, Gus Harris


technology data on boardroom screen plus people in meeting

What are the key drivers for private markets to embrace artificial intelligence and other advanced tech?

The rapid growth and large size of the alternatives market has been matched by a growing amount of data that needs to be managed. As managers and funds get bigger, we are heading towards a point where that data becomes too much to handle, and we need more thoughtful discussions about how all of this information gets put to good use.

Secondly, the amount of data that is being demanded and delivered to GPs – even without that market growth – has broadened immensely. There are ever more reporting demands, whether they be ESG-related or linked to a greater need for transparency in certain aspects of the business, as well as in financial metrics.

Thirdly, the ultimate investors in the alternatives space are also demanding more information and transparency from their GPs.

All of this is happening against the backdrop of technology having rapidly evolved over the last five to 10 years. A lot of these demands to process more data – to use that data and to communicate that data more quickly – are happening just as the possibilities offered by technology are profoundly more expansive than they used to be.

A lot of tools that one needs to process this data are now available off the shelf from technology providers – especially from the cloud providers. Those providers have become a lot better at providing more than just software or hardware, and are instead offering enhanced computational capabilities, with AI falling into that camp.

So, demands have grown exponentially, and at the same time capabilities have come along significantly, which makes this a good time for private markets to embrace advanced tech. For a lot of participants, it is important to think about how to adopts me of this modern technology while preserving the investments made previously. We don’t have perfect information about how technology will continue to evolve, but anyone thinking about what to build today needs to consider their ability to pivot down the road as new technologies continue to emerge.

Is it now essential that private markets participants get on board with these tools?

Yes, it is, but the specifics will vary on a case-by-case basis. The more expansive and demanding the operation, the greater the need will be for investment and adoption of these tools and technologies, including big data warehouse platforms, modular application architecture, high speed computation and AI. More investors will be demanding more information, and portfolios will be larger and products more complex, and this means adoption needs to be more involved.

The extent to which managers get on board with these tools depends on what they really need in terms of modern tech and modern capabilities. A lot of firms could fall into the trap of overshooting and investing a lot more than they need to. Many will also fail to invest enough, and of course investment from the organisation is a lot more than just money, but also people, infrastructure, time and culture.

For a large expansive fund, it will be a big investment to adopt the tools to address complex problems, but a smaller operation may want to be a little more surgical in how much they adopt. Even so, the technology challenge does need to be addressed with modern tech, whether your fund is €300 million or €3 billion. Even a smaller fund, if they don’t think about this properly, could be building a trap around technology for the future, by making decisions now that in three years’ time will leave them with an archaic and unscalable infrastructure. It is expected that any technology transformation will embed some tech debt due to the nature of trade-offs that will need to be made, but it is also important to understand the extent of the tech debt that is being built into the system as part of the planning process.

Building a function for the future often involves wider discussion in the business to include key decision-makers. Unless you have a technology strategy in place that is consistent with the demands and expectations of your key stakeholders, you are going to encounter many challenges.

In my experience, almost every manager I speak to understands there is an organisational challenge around the technology capabilities of their institution. Even those at the beginning of the journey understand it is a complicated problem and a huge investment decision that should not be taken lightly. This journey is as much an organisational challenge as it is a technology challenge.

How can firms mitigate the risks associated with implementation?

The first risk is the risk of doing nothing. That is fairly significant, because it leaves you saddled with whatever you are doing now in a world where your competitors are surpassing you. The key question here is whether others around you are moving rapidly with advanced technology and whether you feel you are going to be at a disadvantage in terms of raising money, delivering performance, providing investor transparency and executing on decision-making if you fail to keep up.

The other extreme is the risk of diving into this with an old-school mentality, making a huge investment and simply laying out your requirements and asking someone to build you a solution. The concern there is that you expend a lot of resources to get something built and then find it is not really what you needed. Unfortunately, buyer’s remorse is not uncommon.

Another risk is building something good but not being able to maintain it. If you outsource the work and don’t really understand how it all operates, you may find out later that the total cost of ownership is exorbitant and the cost of changes is unacceptable. You want a solution that is manageable and nimble rather than unwieldy.

At Alter Domus, we work with our clients to approach tech transformations in stages, with discrete deliverables along the way. Success is users starting to see practical and usable solutions relatively quickly and often that they can begin using in their everyday work, which reinforces the project as stakeholders become more engaged.

A third mitigant is that solutions need to not be so intricately connected that the system is a monolith. It is preferable for the system to operate as a series of cogs that can be enhanced, replaced, or removed without impacting other parts of the solution. A lot of pieces need to be independent of each other but architected in a way that creates one elegant experience for the customer. Today’s technologies afford this possibility.

We are firm believers in building solutions for clients that can be maintained in a low-cost way. We don’t want our clients burdened with a system that will slow them down and prove costly to change and update.

What kind of shift in mindset is required to embed modern tech capabilities?

Going about this journey requires a cultural transformation, which needs careful change management that starts during the planning process. The possibilities and the limitations of the technology need to be understood. It begins with the leadership team to ensure that the organisation understands what is possible with technology alongside a focus on what the business really needs.

The change management aspect is also significant. The shift in mindset has to be around change being a good thing: we are going to be more efficient, and your job is going to be focused on more high-value activities. The organisation needs to communicate extremely well, manage expectations, and be ready for consistent enhancement and improvement.

What challenges with legacy systems might firms encounter and how can those be overcome?

A lot of legacy providers are on their own modernisation journeys, so it is important to understand how those systems themselves are going to be transformed, with some taking a more proactive approach than others. You may find that your legacy provider is not aligned with your technology journey. It’s wise to think about ways to adopt your modern technology and embrace it, without taking it for granted that all your requirements need to go through the legacy system. Maybe you can bypass your legacy system and find a new way to solve a problem. This would be a classic case of disintermediation for some legacy systems providers. If you think your legacy system is going to impair your ability to make decisions, it may be better to just start afresh.

But you definitely want the provider of your legacy systems, whether internally built or not, to be thinking about how they are going to modernise. If they are not, that may be a worrying sign.

What are the key elements to get right for a smooth transition to modern tech?

The key elements are communication, managing expectations and identifying early wins that will spur you on to the next phase. Breaking a problem into smaller chunks, with wins along the way, is really important. This is not a ‘one and done’; this never ends. You need to be always thinking about your total cost of ownership and what it is going to cost to not just build a new system, but also maintain it. Ask yourself all the time whether you are getting what you really want, which means being careful on your requirements, involving all your stakeholders, and being sure to build something that is really fit for purpose.

This article was originally published in PEI’s Fund Services Report.

Key contacts

Gus Harris

Gus Harris

United States

Head of AD Data & Analytics

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Alter Domus sees increases across the board in PwC’s 2023 Observatory for Management Companies Barometer

The observatory uses figures from a sample of 125 Luxembourg management companies to reveal key trends in the industry.


architecture modern curves

We’re proud to share that we’ve been listed in PwC’s Observatory for Management Companies 2023 Barometer, and that this year’s results have seen our rankings increase significantly. 

In 2021, Alter Domus was ranked tenth in the list of top ten Luxembourg authorised AIFMs. The latest rankings show a notable increase; we’re now listed as fourth in the top five third-party AIFMs and eighth in the top ten third-party ManCos, as of December 2022. We’ve also been named a Top-5 ManCo managing Article 8 and 9 products.

What’s more, our Luxembourg ManCo AuM increased by 52% between December 2021 and December 2022; this represents the largest increase in our peer group.

Alter Domus offers end-to-end support for clients launching, managing and administrating regulated and unregulated investment vehicles. We offer our third-party AIFM Services in both Luxembourg and Ireland. To find out more about how we can support you in the alternatives space, please get in touch.

Key contacts

Alain Delobbe

Alain Delobbe

Luxembourg

Head of Management Company Luxembourg

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Transforming the alternative investment industry

Alex Traub discusses Alter Domus’ digital transformation


technology colleagues analyzing data on screen

What challenges are faced by the alternative investment industry and how is Alter Domus helping its clients?

Generally, the alternatives industry is in robust health with demand for alternative strategies growing globally. According to Preqin, assets under management in alternatives will reach more than $23trn by the end of 2027, up from $14trn at the end of 2021. However, in the short term, there are difficult economic circumstances to be confronted, as inflation and interest rate rises are undoubtedly providing strong headwinds.

More fundamentally, we’ve recognised that our clients’ ability to scale their businesses has been hampered by outdated legacy technology, steep operational costs and tough labour conditions. As trusted partners of the world’s leading alternative investment managers, removing these obstacles to growth is our absolute focus.

Indeed, Alter Domus is in the middle of a transformational digital journey that is changing the scope, scale and impact of the solutions we offer. Where once Alter Domus was just a fund administrator, we have reimagined our business across the whole data and information chain, seamlessly connecting back to front offices through technology – our vertically integrated service offering is entirely unique in today’s market.

What role has technology played in Alter Domus’s ongoing transformation?

Our aim is to empower our clients with tech-driven solutions and tools that give a clear advantage to their investment and risk management decisions, with fully digitalised and integrated workflows, platforms and analytically ready data that hits new levels of accuracy, speed and transparency.

There are three distinct strands to our tech strategy: the acquisition of cutting-edge, data-driven companies; partnering with best-in-class platforms such as eFront and Yardi; and the proprietary development of world-class tech solutions, unmatched across our industry, from CorPro, to VBO or Agency360.

To get an idea of the scale of our tech transition, our ‘Accelerate’ programme, launched in 2020 with a $125m investment over five years, will utilise technology to transform our core activities and create new data assets for our clients across different geographies, funds and product types.

What kind of innovative new services is Alter Domus offering?

Our drive for innovation and customer value is reflected in the establishment of our data and analytics team in the last 18 months. The data and analytics team’s SaaS solutions utilize automation and machine-learning capabilities to reduce or remove issues caused by data acquisition, storage, analytics and distribution across investors’ entire portfolios.

The game changer is that the data and analytics team treats data agnostically; Alter Domus no longer must be the fund administrator for our clients to service aspects or all of their data – almost any kind of documentation needed for private credit, CLO management or by asset owners and asset managers can now be extracted, monitored, analyzed and reported on using our alternative investment services. It’s a brilliant reflection of the rapid, impactful changes occurring across Alter Domus – changes from which our customers will reap benefits.

This article was originally published in The Drawdown’s Fund Administration Special Report.

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Insights

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Can data technology deliver better-performing private equity funds?

Tim Toska from Alter Domus explains how technology can support operational improvements and help GPs to make more informed decisions


colleagues gathered around laptop

Amid today’s macroeconomic uncertainty, what operational improvements should GPs make to maximize efficiency?

A greater focus on manual, repetitive jobs that take excessive time. Tasks such as downloading and processing external documents, KYC checks, payment initiations, accounting entries, and waterfall calculations are ripe for improvement by automation, outsourcing, or a combination of both. This allows managers to take advantage of the digital providers specialized in making organizations as efficient as possible. This efficiency isn’t gained by reducing costs but by providing employees with the capacity to focus on additional value-add tasks that have a greater impact.

How can these improvements result in more informed decisions?

Operational improvements alone won’t result in more informed decisions. A firm needs to have the right people. Operational improvements provided by tools like AI and automation eliminate the manual, time-consuming effort to locate data, run analysis, and compare it with the market or industry. These improvements allow teams timelier analysis without sacrificing depth, breadth, or accuracy. This in turn allows for better identification of investment and exit opportunities.

What opportunities do you see for GPs to improve productivity by investing in new technologies?

Over the past three years, there has been a focus on technology to bring people and data together. Now, there’s a focus on using data in unstructured formats effectively or running processes with decisions similar to those made by humans. Being able to identify the shared value of technologies like AI, OCR, automation, or blockchain, and continuing to invest in them allows entrepreneurs to continue to innovate.

What specialized needs do you see from different kinds of private equity funds?

Fund of funds managers are unique in that their interactions between front office, back office, middle office, and investors is predicated by the ability to source and analyze data at both the fund and portfolio company level. Therefore, one of the specialized needs for a fund of funds is the ability to efficiently download, store and process notices and statements using automation and OCR. This would allow for greater focus on analyzing the data, rather than simply retrieving.

The needs of buyout and growth managers are slightly different as they look at information provided to them at a portfolio company level, which typically lacks consistency. These managers’ needs are more focused on the ability to not only process but standardize the financial data across their portfolios to provide their teams with consistent data metrics. This is a critical step to allow for more informed and timely decisions downstream.

How can funds improve the back-to-front office infrastructure and what benefits would that yield?

The first step to improving the infrastructure is understanding the source of data and how it interacts with back-to-front office. It’s a three-legged stool: there’s data management, data extraction, and data visualization. Internally, a firm must determine where the data resides and how it can be shared across the firm among all stakeholders.

A comprehensive data management solution for any size fund manager would allow for better, more consistent, and informed decision-making, efficient handling of requests within a firm or to investors, and better monitoring of metrics at firm, fund, and investment level. At Alter Domus, we have had the unique opportunity to work alongside our clients and leverage other resources to assist in these transformational journeys and see the benefits they yield.

This article was originally published in Preqin's Private Equity Quarterly Update for Q1 2023.

Key contacts

Tim Toska

Tim Toska

United States

Global Sector Head, Private Equity

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Japan’s demographic dilemma offers an opportunity for private equity

Scott Reynolds—Country Executive, Japan at Alter Domus—explores the implications of an aging population for investors in a recent article for Private Equity International


Location in Japan

The piece examines the country’s evolving needs and challenges across sectors such as recruitment and healthcare, and the unconventional investment opportunities this shift creates. Scott highlights that the Japanese government is now taking steps to boost the population by encouraging immigration—up almost 44% since 2015.

What could this increase make possible for Japan’s economy—and how can investors benefit?

The Japanese government has historically been reluctant to open those gates, but this is slowly changing.

Scott Reynolds, Country Executive Japan
This article was originally published in Private Equity International.

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Insights

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