waterfalls
What should be included in a waterfall distribution notice?
It should include proceeds, calculation summary, capital returned, preferred return, sponsor carry, reserves, investor amount, payment date, and support contact.
The notice should let investors understand both the cash they receive and the economics that produced it. For sponsors, LP finance teams, administrators, and counsel reviewing distribution economics, the practical answer is to treat the question as part of distribution modeling, return thresholds, preferred return, catch-up, promote, reserves, true-up, and clawback review, not as a one-off definition. The record should show the governing agreement, proceeds schedule, capital accounts, waterfall model, reserve analysis, distribution notice, and approval record so an investor, lender, counsel, administrator, or operating lead can reconstruct the decision later. Attach or summarize the tier calculation clearly enough to reconcile to the agreement without exposing unnecessary spreadsheet complexity. The common failure mode is sending payment amounts without explaining reserve decisions, sponsor carry, or how the distribution moved through the waterfall.
Related glossary terms
Related questions
What should be checked before running a distribution waterfall?
The team should check proceeds, capital accounts, return thresholds, preferred return, catch-up terms, reserves, fees, expenses, and document language.
How should sponsors explain a preferred return in investor materials?
They should explain the rate, compounding method, accrual period, payment priority, catch-up interaction, and whether unpaid amounts carry forward.
What is the difference between a catch-up and a promote split?
A catch-up reallocates distributions after the preferred return so the sponsor reaches an agreed share, while the promote split governs residual upside after that tier.