Fund Vintage
Definition
The year in which a private equity or venture capital fund makes its first investment or its final close. Vintage year is used to group and compare fund performance because macroeconomic conditions at the time of investment significantly influence returns. Fund vintage analysis helps investors benchmark performance against peer funds raised in the same period, accounting for market conditions that affect the acquisition pricing and subsequent development of intangible-rich portfolio companies.
Complementary Terms
Concepts that frequently appear alongside Fund Vintage in practice.
The year in which a private equity or venture capital fund makes its first investment or first capital call, used to classify and compare fund performance across different economic and market cycles. Vintage year analysis is essential for benchmarking because funds launched in different years face different entry valuations, exit environments, and macroeconomic conditions.
An investment strategy that spreads private equity or venture capital commitments across multiple fund vintage years to reduce the impact of any single economic cycle on portfolio performance. Vintage diversification is a core principle of institutional portfolio construction and helps smooth the J-curve effect inherent in illiquid fund investments.
An investment vehicle that allocates capital to a portfolio of private equity, venture capital, or hedge fund managers rather than investing directly in companies. Fund of funds provide diversification across managers, strategies, and vintages, though they involve an additional layer of management fees and carried interest.
A private equity or venture capital fund that continues to operate beyond its intended life, holding illiquid portfolio companies that have neither achieved exit nor been written off. Zombie funds present governance challenges, carry ongoing management costs, and often reflect unrealised intangible asset potential that has failed to convert into realisable value.
The managing entity of a private equity or venture capital fund, responsible for making investment decisions, managing portfolio companies, and generating returns for investors. GPs typically earn management fees and carried interest.
A private equity and venture capital performance metric combining both realised returns (distributions) and unrealised value (remaining portfolio value) relative to total capital contributed. TVPI equals DPI plus RVPI and provides the most complete picture of a fund's overall performance.
The process of offering shares of a private company to the public for the first time through a stock exchange listing. An IPO is a major exit route for venture capital and private equity investors, and requires extensive preparation including financial audits, regulatory compliance, and valuation.
The share of investment profits that a fund manager (general partner) receives as performance-based compensation, typically 20% of profits above a hurdle rate. Carry is the primary financial incentive for venture capital and private equity fund managers.
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