lp-reporting
How should sponsors manage LP report delivery evidence?
They should retain delivery lists, portal logs, email records, document versions, timestamps, bounced messages, and follow-up responses.
Delivery evidence matters when reporting obligations, side letters, audit requests, or investor disputes require proof of what was sent and when. For sponsors, reporting leads, fund administrators, and investor relations teams, the practical answer is to treat the question as part of period close, capital account reconciliation, valuation support, investor communication, governance notices, and follow-up tracking, not as a one-off definition. The record should show financial statements, capital accounts, valuation marks, portfolio commentary, notices, LPAC records, investor Q&A, and delivery logs so an investor, lender, counsel, administrator, or operating lead can reconstruct the decision later. Keep a delivery log that ties each report version to recipient groups, publication date, access permissions, and known exceptions. The common failure mode is assuming portal publication is enough while lacking evidence that specific investors received required notices or restricted materials.
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Related questions
What should be reconciled before sending an LP report?
The team should reconcile capital accounts, contributions, distributions, fees, expenses, valuations, portfolio metrics, notices, and prior investor questions.
How much portfolio detail should sponsors include in quarterly LP updates?
Sponsors should include enough detail to explain material performance, value drivers, risks, valuation changes, and actions without overwhelming investors with raw data.
How should sponsors answer repeat LP reporting questions?
They should log repeat questions, identify the missing context, update the reporting template, and send consistent answers across investors.