Trust planning for carried interest: What it is and why it matters to your private equity or venture capital fund | SVB Private (2024)

Key takeaways

  • Carried interest can be difficult to value and highly speculative, but it can also be worth a tremendous amount, which makes it great for advanced estate planning.
  • IRS code greatly restricts your ability to gift carried interest, but you can avoid running afoul of it.
  • You can help benefit your fund’s general partners by creating vertical slices and using carry derivatives.

Carried interestis a share of the profits earned from a private equity or venture capital fund’s investments and is allocated to a fund’s General Partners (GPs). It’s a form of compensation provided to fund managers for their services. The share of the profits is provided once a predetermined minimum rate of return – a ‘hurdle rate’ – has been achieved.

While it’s difficult to value and can be highly speculative, carried interest has the potential to be worth a tremendous amount. As an example, if a GP is part of a $200 million fund with ‘2 and 20’ structure that achieves a 2.5X return, the carry could be worth $10 million to that GP. This makes it great for advanced estate planning – generational transfer and philanthropic planning alike – but it does come with certain limitations.

Section 2701 of the Internal Revenue Code greatly restricts the ability to gift carried interest to family members and still retain the underlying capital interest, or the amount committed by the GP to invest in the fund. This means that if a GP transfers their entire carried interest in the fund to their children, the entire interest, including the underlying capital investment shall be deemed to have been gifted.

The Value of the Vertical Slice

It is possible, however, to avoid running afoul of Section 2701 by creating a vertical slice. This is done by proportionately reducing each class of ownership interest in the fund.

For example, let’s say your capital commitment is $1 million and your carried interest is 20%. To gift half your carried interest, you must gift half the capital interest too. (Keep in mind that the giftee will be responsible for capital calls on the gifted portion if the fund requires additional capital.) Whether the gift is made directly to a trust or to an individual, it must be proportionate and will need to have an independent appraisal.

An easy way to manage the process is by putting the fund interests into a family limited partnership (FLP) or into a limited liability company (or LLC), and then transfer interests in the new entity. The gifts themselves can be made to either individuals or trusts that move the assets outside the estate. Before gifting, however, a valuation of the carried interest and capital must be done to determine the actual value of the gift; this can be costly and time consuming.

The Advantages of Carry Derivatives

Another creative strategy is to use carry derivatives for your estate planning. With a carry derivative, the contract amount determines how much will be paid into the fund at a future date. You can also stipulate a floor or hurdle return rate that must be exceeded before funds are due to the trust account.

While this can be an amazing estate planning tool, keep in mind the following:

      1. Review the operating agreement of the fund to determine which transfers, if any, are permissible.
      2. Borrowing against fund interests may be more challenging.
      3. Vesting restrictions may have a different treatment by the IRS.
      4. It may affect any management fee waivers that are in place.

Finally, remember to account for GP commitments paid after the time of the original gift.

To learn more, speak to an SVB Private wealth advisor today.

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Trust planning for carried interest:  What it is and why it matters to your private equity or venture capital fund | SVB Private (2024)

FAQs

Trust planning for carried interest: What it is and why it matters to your private equity or venture capital fund | SVB Private? ›

Carried interest is a share of the profits earned from a private equity or venture capital fund's investments and is allocated to a fund's General Partners (GPs). It's a form of compensation provided to fund managers for their services.

What does carried interest mean in private equity? ›

Carried interest is a share of profits from a private equity, venture capital, or hedge fund paid as incentive compensation to the fund's general partner. Carried interest typically is only paid if a fund achieves a specified minimum return.

Why is carried interest taxed as capital gains? ›

Proponents of carried interest argue that the investment strategies, expertise, and oversight provided by fund managers significantly bolster profits for a wide variety of investment vehicles and thus, carried interest should be considered investment income and taxed as such.

Why do investors allocate part of their investments to private equity? ›

Because private firms are typically smaller than public companies, investors seeking greater than market exposure to small companies could consider a higher allocation to private equity.

How does VC carry work? ›

Carried interest, or “carry” for short, is the percentage of a private fund's investment profits that a fund manager receives as compensation. Used primarily by private equity funds, including venture capital funds, carried interest is one of the primary ways fund managers are paid.

Who benefits from carried interest? ›

The general partner receives its carried interest as compensation for its investment management services. (Typically, the general partner also receives a separate annual fee based on the size of the fund's assets.) The limited partners receive the balance of the fund's profits in proportion to their capital investment.

What is the carried interest tax loophole? ›

The carried interest loophole allows investment managers to pay the lower 23.8 percent capital gains tax rate on income received as compensation, rather than the ordinary income tax rates of up to 40.8 percent that they would pay for the same amount of wage income.

What is the carried interest controversy? ›

According to its opponents, the carried interest loophole is an unfair giveaway to already wealthy asset managers. It allows them to pay less in taxes at a much lower rate than most other workers and can lead to someone earning $400,000 per year in a lower tax bracket than someone earning $60,000.

How to treat carried interest? ›

Carried interest has traditionally been treated as capital gains income taxed at favorable capital gains rates.

How do private equity firms avoid taxes? ›

As Investopedia notes, private equity funds are generally structured as pass-through entities, which means they can pass their tax responsibilities to their investors or limited partners. The investors then report their portion of the fund's earnings or losses on their personal tax returns.

Why do investors prefer private equity? ›

Low correlation to other asset classes: In terms of performance, Private Equity funds are less volatile than listed markets. Diversification: You can diversify away from more traditional asset classes.

Is BlackRock a private equity firm? ›

BlackRock's private equity team help debunk common myths as it relates to drivers of performance, the use of secondaries as a portfolio management tool and also walk through case examples within primary, secondary, and co-investment examples.

How much of my portfolio should be in private equity? ›

While the proportion of private equity in a portfolio very much depends on an investor's unique preferences, our findings suggest that up to 20% of an equity allocation is appropriate. Investors tend to include private equity in their portfolios to harvest liquidity premiums and enhance returns.

How does carried interest work in private equity? ›

Carried interest represents the performance fee for the GP in a private equity fund. Investors are usually guaranteed a return of their capital plus a minimum hurdle rate of return before the GP shares in profits. Carried interest aligns the interests of the LPs with those of the GP in a private equity fund.

Where do VC funds get their money? ›

VC firms typically control a pool of funds collected from wealthy individuals, insurance companies, pension funds, and other institutional investors. Although all of the partners have partial ownership of the fund, the VC firm decides how the monies will be invested.

How does a VC get paid? ›

The investors get 70% to 80% of the gains; the venture capitalists get the remaining 20% to 30%. The amount of money any partner receives beyond salary is a function of the total growth of the portfolio's value and the amount of money managed per partner. (See the exhibit “Pay for Performance.”)

What is the difference between profits interest and carried interest? ›

A profits interest, also known as “carried interest” or “promote,” is an equity interest in the future appreciation of a partnership (or an LLC that is taxed as a partnership). Profits interests are sometimes described as options, but there are some key differences between the two types of incentives.

What is the difference between catch up and carried interest? ›

Catch-up tranche - 100% of the distributions go to the sponsor of the fund until it receives a certain percentage of profits. Carried interest - A stated percentage of distributions that the sponsor receives.

Is carried interest and promote the same thing? ›

A "carried interest" (also known as a "promoted interest" or a "promote" in the real estate industry) is a financial interest in the long-term capital gain of a development.

What does 2 and 20 mean in private equity? ›

The 2 and 20 is a hedge fund compensation structure consisting of a management fee and a performance fee. 2% represents a management fee which is applied to the total assets under management. A 20% performance fee is charged on the profits that the hedge fund generates, beyond a specified minimum threshold.

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