Avoiding distractions from excessive private market choice



With an abundance of private market options coming to market, due diligence becomes increasingly important as advisers separate the wheat from the chaff, adviser Charlie Viola has said.
Viola, who founded Viola Private Wealth last year, appeared on The ifa Show podcast, sister title of Money Management, to discuss how his firm navigates the choices in private markets.
In the past, there were limited private market options available and, according to Viola, these often carried an association with the “exotic” characteristics. However, as the market has grown, so too have the opportunities available.
“We wanted to make sure that we were giving clients access to different types of investments, generating their returns in different ways and making sure we were generating revenue for clients, especially through the cycle.
“The private market is [now] huge and there is so much opportunity in that space.
“What needed to happen [was we get] those really good managers in those private markets be able to bring to these wholesale and mezzanine-style clients an opportunity to invest in those spaces.”
However, Viola highlighted that too much choice can become distracting.
“Choice is always a double-edged sword. We work really off the due diligence process that we go through around manager selection, fund selection.
“There is obviously a danger that as you get more and more of this stuff come to market, you’ve got people not making the right decisions.”
Like all financial advice, directing clients into private market investments requires the right due diligence and to stick to popular wisdom.
“The danger is that with lots of choice, there will always be ones that don’t perform as well,” Viola added.
“So, the due diligence process that we or anybody else like us go through becomes really important because ultimately, you’re backing the jockey. The manager selection becomes super important and therefore the due diligence process also becomes really important.
“The normal kind of investment management theory is that asset allocation accounts for something like 85–90 per cent of total investment return. We’re a big believer in not exposing all the clients’ funds to one type of risk.”
As Viola highlighted, diversity is “risk mitigation 101”, and history has proven time and time again that the “all your eggs in one basket” approach, while capable of high rewards, carries much higher risk.
“The greater your exposure to one type of asset and one type of return and one type of thing that drives that return, the greater the risk you’re taking. If you’re taking that much risk, are you being rewarded and can you handle the downturn if it occurs?” Viola said.
“All we say to investors is that we can do that; we can keep buying CBA and BHP shares, or we can continue to just invest in the Mag Seven. But what we’re doing is we’re over apexing the risk that you’re taking for the possible outcome.
“What we would much rather do is generate a return that may well be 200 or 300 basis points below what that return might be over the short term to generate a return that is slightly lower, but we’re taking significantly less risk to do it.”
Recommended for you
Two commentators have shared why cultural alignment can be the biggest deal breaker when it comes to advice M&A and how to ensure a successful fit.
Formal education has played a large role in enhancing the advice profession over the last decade but, with the bar now so high, two advisers debate whether it is necessary to complete additional study.
With the final tally for FY25 now confirmed, how many advisers left during the financial year and how does it compare to the previous year?
HUB24 has appointed Matt Willis from Vanguard as an executive general manager of platform growth to strengthen the platform’s relationships with industry stakeholders.