sponsor-economics
How should sponsors explain their economics to investors?
They should explain fees, carry, promote, co-investment, hurdle, catch-up, expenses, reserves, and when each economic right is earned.
Sponsor economics should be understandable before closing and reconcilable when cash is distributed. For sponsors, LPs, investors, and advisors evaluating sponsor compensation and alignment, the practical answer is to treat the question as part of fee design, carry and promote modeling, co-investment, reserves, governance, distribution timing, and incentive alignment, not as a one-off definition. The record should show the economics memo, governing documents, waterfall model, fee schedule, co-invest records, distribution examples, and investor disclosures so an investor, lender, counsel, administrator, or operating lead can reconstruct the decision later. Provide a simple economics memo and model example that match the legal documents and investor reporting language. The common failure mode is using market shorthand like carry or promote without explaining the exact calculation, timing, and investor impact.
Related glossary terms
Related questions
What is a reasonable transaction fee for an independent sponsor?
Reasonableness depends on deal size, sponsor work, investor expectations, financing constraints, fee offsets, and whether the fee affects alignment.
How should management fees be structured in a single-deal vehicle?
They should match the actual administrative and oversight work, duration, investor expectations, expense budget, and reporting obligations of the vehicle.
When does sponsor co-investment improve alignment?
It improves alignment when the sponsor invests meaningful capital at the same terms, bears downside exposure, and does not rely only on fee-driven compensation.