Tag: Co-Investments

Improving Alpha: Decoding the Research in Secondaries, Co-investing, and Impact Funds

Improving Alpha: Decoding the Research in Secondaries, Co-investing, and Impact Funds

What have been the main motivators in LP investors looking at secondary markets and co-investments? Can larger asset owners like sovereign wealth funds and major endowments play in this space, or is it better left to more nimble allocators?

Back in April, Improving Alpha welcomed Simon Mayer from Carnegie Mellon University to discuss his thoughts on academia’s influence on institutional investing (definitely worth a listen here). In this brand new episode, we build on that discussion, welcoming Josh Lerner, Jacob H. Schiff Professor of Investment Banking, Harvard Business School, to discuss his research and perspectives on secondaries, co-investments, impact funds, and his future research on how geopolitics could impact and transform venture capital.

Additional highlights that Josh and Michael covered are below:

  • How is the growth of private equity and venture capital pacing in relation to secondaries?
  • Can endowments leverage secondaries effectively? Does their organizational size impact their approach to these financial vehicles? 
  • What are the benefits of LPs investing in co-investments vs. traditional private equity structures? Based on the research, do these structures end up at the same place in terms of performance?
  • Does Josh believe that we’re in an overvaluation period as it relates to AI investments? When could we see a correction, and what organizations will most likely capture the value from AI innovations?
  • Are impact funds making a real contribution to society and pioneering technologies that more traditional funds avoid? What does their performance look like for allocators looking to get involved?
  • In the last 30 years, up until 2022, we have seen venture capital moving away from “tough technologies”. How is the game evolving today?
  • What is Josh’s perspective on why large corporations fail at internalizing disruptive tech in favor of buying venture-backed start-ups instead?
  • and more.

Resources:

Connect with Josh Lerner:

Connect with Michael Oliver Weinberg: 

About Our Guest:

Josh Lerner is the Jacob H. Schiff Professor at Harvard Business School and Co-Director of the HBS Private Capital Project.  Much of his research focuses on venture capital and private equity organizations and innovation policy. He has been recently recognized as among the forty most influential economists worldwide by ScholarGPS and research.com.

He has co-directed the National Bureau of Economic Research’s Productivity, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship Program since 2010 and serves as co-editor of their publication, Entrepreneurship and Innovation Policy and the Economy. He founded and runs the Private Capital Research Institute, a nonprofit devoted to encouraging access to data and research and has been a frequent leader of and participant in the World Economic Forum projects and events.

In the 1993-1994 academic year, he introduced an elective course for second-year MBAs.  Over the past three decades, “Venture Capital and Private Equity” has consistently been one of the largest elective courses at Harvard Business School and whose teaching materials are used in business schools around the world. He has taught numerous executive and doctoral courses on venture capital, private equity, and entrepreneurship and has introduced a series of entrepreneurship classes at Harvard College. 

He graduated from Yale College with a special divisional major.  He worked for several years on issues concerning technological innovation and public policy. He then earned a Ph.D. from Harvard’s Economics Department.

The information covered and posted represents the views and opinions of the guest and does not necessarily represent the views or opinions of Vidrio Financial, and/or our host, Michael Oliver Weinberg. The Content has been made available for informational and educational purposes only. The Content is not intended to be a substitute for professional investing advice. Always seek the advice of your financial advisor or other qualified financial service provider with any questions you may have regarding your investment planning.

The release date may not correspond to the recording date.

Improving Alpha: Kevin SigRist on Modernizing Governance and Improving Investment Operations for a $200B Portfolio

Improving Alpha: Kevin SigRist on Modernizing Governance and Improving Investment Operations for a $200B Portfolio

When examining sole fiduciary states, such as North Carolina, the direction of pension plans and other asset pools typically consolidates under a single elected official, typically the State Treasurer. Combine that setup with disappointing investment performance, and the stage begins to get set to reform both governance and investment operations. This is what happened in 2025 when Brad Briner, the Treasurer of North Carolina, began to implement reforms to adopt best practices in institutional investments and lay out the new organization known as the North Carolina Investment Authority.

For this episode of the Improving Alpha podcast, host Michael Oliver Weinberg welcomes Kevin SigRist, Chief Investment Officer, North Carolina Investment Authority, to discuss the $200B pension portfolio. Kevin covers not only the performance future of the plan, but the risk profile, governance, views on inflation, and other current allocator trends.

Additional key highlights include:

  • How will the significant governance reforms of 2025 impact the pension for this year and beyond, and what does Kevin expect from the asset liability study being concluded in February?
  • What is the biggest dial today that will change the pension’s risk profile and reduce the conservative approach that the plan has taken in the past with regard to high-grade fixed income and cash?
  • As the plan shifts from risk in manager selection to more of a market risk focus, how will diversification be impacted across the portfolio?
  • Why are private market allocations so appealing, and why are co-investment levels getting the plan a lot of attention?
  • How is AI being deployed for investment operations and improving collaboration across the team at the North Carolina Investment Authority?
  • Why is manager alignment so important for future allocations?
  • How are advanced modeling and portfolio scenario analysis looking at inflation for their pool of retirees?
  • and more.

 

Resources:

 

Connect with Kevin SigRist: 

 

Connect with Michael Oliver Weinberg: 

 

About Our Guest:

Kevin SigRist is Chief Investment Officer at the North Carolina Investment Authority, where he oversees the investment strategy for approximately $200 billion across pension, defined contribution, and state asset pools. He has spent decades in institutional investing, with prior roles including CIO positions at the North Carolina Department of State Treasurer, senior leadership at the Florida State Board of Administration, and work in global investing with SAMA’s investment subsidiary. Kevin’s background spans public markets, private markets, asset liability management, and governance reform, with a career focused on aligning long-term investment decisions with real funding and fiduciary objectives.

 

The information covered and posted represents the views and opinions of the guest and does not necessarily represent the views or opinions of Vidrio Financial, and/or our host, Michael Oliver Weinberg. The Content has been made available for informational and educational purposes only. The Content is not intended to be a substitute for professional investing advice. Always seek the advice of your financial advisor or other qualified financial service provider with any questions you may have regarding your investment planning.

 

The release date may not correspond to the recording date.