Catering and Return Manipulation in Private Equity
Abstract
We provide evidence that private equity (PE) fund managers manipulate returns to cater to their investors. Using a large dataset of PE real estate funds, we show PE fund managers overstate returns if they oversee a larger share of their investors’ assets, and doing so has a more significant impact on investors’ reported returns. Additional results are inconsistent with models in which investors punish or are deceived by manipulations. In contrast, our results highlight an underlying tension in PE performance: the “phony happiness” some PE investors receive from overstated and smoothed interim returns due to agency frictions within their organizations.
Authors
Blake Jackson, University of Florida, Warrington College of Business
David C. Ling, University of Florida, Warrington College of Business
Andy Naranjo, University of Florida, Warrington College of Business