Zaidwood Capital

How do Private Equity Continuation Funds Work?

Private equity continuation funds, also known as GP-led secondary transactions, are financial vehicles created by a general partner (GP) to hold portfolio assets beyond the term of an existing fund. These structures allow GPs to extend their management of high-performing assets while providing liquidity options for investors.

The process typically follows these key steps:

  1. Vehicle Formation and Asset Transfer: The GP establishes a new fund vehicle and transfers one or more assets (either a single-asset or multi-asset pool) from the legacy fund into this new structure.
  2. Liquidity Choice for LPs: Existing limited partners (LPs) are given a choice: they can either exit their investment for cash at a set valuation or “roll over” their interest into the new continuation vehicle to maintain exposure to the assets.
  3. New Capital Integration: The transaction often involves bringing in new institutional investors to provide the capital necessary to buy out exiting LPs and fund future growth or acquisitions.
  4. Valuation and Fairness: Because the GP acts as both the buyer and the seller, the process requires independent third-party valuations and fairness opinions. This ensures the assets are transferred at a fair market price and that conflicts of interest are managed according to regulatory standards like those set by FINRA.
  5. Extended Value Creation: Once the transfer is complete, the GP continues to manage the assets under the new fund’s terms, using the extended timeframe and potential follow-on capital to pursue further operational improvements and value creation before an ultimate exit.

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