| name | secondaries |
| description | PE secondaries analysis — LP interest transfers, GP-led continuation vehicles, and NAV lending.
Activate when the user mentions secondaries, LP secondary, GP-led continuation,
continuation fund, tender offer, strip sale, NAV lending, NAV line, preferred equity
on fund, fund restructuring, stapled secondary, LP portfolio, blind pool discount,
J-curve mitigation, DPI acceleration, or asks about buying or selling PE fund interests.
|
PE Secondaries Analysis
I analyze secondary transactions in private equity — buying and selling existing fund interests. Secondaries are the liquidity mechanism for an illiquid asset class. The key analytical challenge is valuing a portfolio of companies that you can see but can't control, at a price that compensates for the remaining blind pool risk and generates an acceptable return over a compressed hold period.
Scope & Boundaries
What this skill DOES:
- Value LP fund interests using NAV analysis and discount/premium assessment
- Model GP-led continuation vehicle economics (rollover vs. cash-out)
- Analyze LP portfolio sales (strip deals, full portfolio, single-fund)
- Calculate expected returns under various discount-to-NAV scenarios
- Assess blind pool risk and vintage concentration
- Model J-curve mitigation from buying seasoned fund interests
- Analyze NAV lending structures (fund-level credit facilities)
- Evaluate stapled secondaries (commitment to new fund + secondary purchase)
Use a different skill when:
- Direct PE investing →
/pe-buyout or /pe-growth
- Private credit →
/private-credit
- Fund formation and construction →
/vc (for VC fund math) or /pe-buyout (PE fund metrics)
Available Tools
| Tool | Command | When to Use |
|---|
| IRR / NPV | python3 tools/irr.py | Buyer return calculation at various discounts |
| VC Returns | python3 tools/vc_returns.py | Fund metrics (TVPI, DPI, RVPI) |
| DCF | python3 tools/dcf.py | Cash flow valuation of remaining portfolio |
Pre-Flight Checks
- Transaction type: LP interest sale, GP-led continuation, tender offer, strip sale?
- Fund details: Vintage, strategy, size, GP, current NAV, TVPI, DPI, RVPI
- Portfolio data: Underlying company details, hold periods, recent marks
- Remaining commitments: Unfunded obligations, expected call schedule
- Pricing: Bid/ask as % of NAV
- Seller motivation: Liquidity need, denominator effect, strategy change, regulatory
Phase 1: NAV Analysis & Pricing
Goal: Determine fair value relative to reported NAV.
Fund snapshot:
Vintage: [X]
Fund size: $[X]M
LP commitment: $[X]M
Drawn capital: $[X]M ([X]% called)
Remaining commitment: $[X]M
Reported NAV: $[X]M
Distributions to date:$[X]M
Fund metrics:
TVPI (NAV + distributions) / called = [X]x
DPI (distributions / called) = [X]x
RVPI (NAV / called) = [X]x
Net IRR: [X]%
Discount/Premium Assessment
| Factor | Premium | NAV | Discount |
|---|
| GP quality / track record | Top quartile | Median | Bottom quartile |
| Portfolio quality | Strong performers | Mixed | Impaired assets |
| Fund maturity | Late (2-3yr to exit) | Mid-life | Early (5+ years) |
| Unfunded commitment | <10% remaining | 20-40% | >40% (blind pool) |
| Sector attractiveness | Tailwind sectors | Neutral | Headwind sectors |
| Market conditions | Seller's market | Balanced | Buyer's market |
Typical pricing ranges:
- Top-quartile, late-life: 95-105% of NAV
- Median fund, mid-life: 85-95% of NAV
- Bottom-quartile or early: 70-85% of NAV
- Distressed seller / tail-end: 50-75% of NAV
Phase 2: Return Modeling
Goal: Calculate expected returns at various purchase prices.
Purchase at [X]% of NAV:
Cost basis: $[X]M (NAV $[X]M × [X]%)
(+) Remaining unfunded: $[X]M (assumed called over [X] years)
Total investment: $[X]M
Expected distributions:
Near-term (Year 1-2): $[X]M (from assets close to exit)
Medium-term (Year 2-4): $[X]M (from portfolio growth + exits)
Tail (Year 4+): $[X]M (remaining assets)
Expected total return: $[X]M
MOIC: [X]x
IRR: [X]%
Sensitivity: IRR by Discount and Hold Period
| Discount to NAV | 2-Year Exit | 3-Year Exit | 4-Year Exit |
|---|
| 5% (95% of NAV) | [X]% | [X]% | [X]% |
| 10% (90%) | [X]% | [X]% | [X]% |
| 15% (85%) | [X]% | [X]% | [X]% |
| 20% (80%) | [X]% | [X]% | [X]% |
Run: python3 tools/irr.py --cfs="[-cost, dist_y1, dist_y2, dist_y3, dist_y4]"
Phase 3: GP-Led Continuation Vehicles
Goal: Analyze a GP-led continuation fund from both GP and LP perspectives.
Continuation vehicle structure:
Asset(s) rolling: [Company/portfolio description]
Current GP valuation: $[X]M
New vehicle size: $[X]M
LP options:
(a) Cash out at [X]% of NAV ($[X]M)
(b) Roll into continuation (at NAV)
New investor commitment: $[X]M at [X]% discount
GP rollover: [X]% of carry + co-invest
Economics:
New management fee: [X]% on committed/invested
New carry: [X]% above [X]% pref
GP crystallized carry: $[X]M (from old fund marks)
LP decision framework:
| Factor | Roll | Cash Out |
|---|
| Belief in asset upside | High — more value to create | Low — fully valued |
| GP conflict of interest | Manageable — fairness opinion | Concerning — GP buying from itself |
| Liquidity need | None | Immediate need |
| Discount on new money | Rolls at NAV (no discount) | Cash at NAV |
| Information advantage | Full access as existing LP | N/A |
Red flags: GP crystallizing large carry on the transfer, no fairness opinion, new vehicle terms worse than original fund, no LPAC involvement.
Phase 4: NAV Lending
Goal: Analyze fund-level credit facilities secured by portfolio NAV.
NAV Facility:
Fund NAV: $[X]M
Advance rate: [X]% of NAV
Facility size: $[X]M
Rate: SOFR + [X]bps
Maturity: [X] years
Covenants: Min NAV coverage [X]x, LTV ≤[X]%
Use of proceeds:
(a) DPI acceleration — distribute cash to LPs
(b) Bridge unfunded commitments
(c) Fund GP commitment
(d) Portfolio company support
Risk assessment: NAV lending creates fund-level leverage. If portfolio companies decline in value, the fund may face a margin call requiring asset sales at distressed prices.
Quality Gates
Hard Constraints
- NEVER assume reported NAV is fair value without independent assessment
- NEVER ignore unfunded commitments — they are a real cash obligation
- ALWAYS assess GP conflict of interest in continuation vehicles
- ALWAYS stress test against a 20-30% portfolio markdown
Common Pitfalls
- Trusting stale NAVs — marks can be 3-6 months old, especially in volatile markets
- Ignoring unfunded commitments — buying a 60%-called fund means you owe 40% more
- GP-led at inflated marks — GP has incentive to mark high to crystallize carry
- Concentrating on a single fund — secondaries work best as diversified portfolios
- Forgetting J-curve on remaining commitments — unfunded calls create negative early cash flows
Related Skills
/pe-buyout — understanding the underlying buyout investments
/pe-growth — understanding growth equity portfolio companies
/private-credit — NAV lending and fund-level credit
/attribution — fund performance attribution