The illiquidity challenge
Portfolio construction in liquid markets benefits from well-established frameworks: mean-variance optimisation, factor-based allocation, and dynamic rebalancing. These approaches assume that assets can be bought and sold at known prices with minimal friction.
Illiquid allocations — private equity, venture capital, real estate funds, infrastructure — operate under fundamentally different constraints. Capital is committed but not immediately deployed. Returns are uncertain in both magnitude and timing. Exit opportunities are irregular and often market-dependent.
Pacing and the J-curve
New investors in private markets often underestimate the J-curve effect: the initial period during which management fees and early-stage investments create negative returns before the portfolio matures.
Effective pacing models must account for:
Liquidity management
Perhaps the most underappreciated aspect of illiquid portfolio construction is liquidity management. Investors must maintain sufficient liquid reserves to:
Rebalancing constraints
In liquid markets, portfolio rebalancing is relatively straightforward. In illiquid portfolios, rebalancing is constrained by the inability to sell positions on demand. This means that the initial allocation decision carries greater weight, and the portfolio's actual composition will drift over time as different investments mature at different rates.
Modelling uncertainty
Traditional portfolio models often assume normal distributions of returns and stable correlations. Illiquid investments exhibit:
Conclusion
Portfolio construction for illiquid allocations requires explicit modelling of cash flow timing, liquidity reserves, and rebalancing constraints. Investors who treat illiquid allocations as simply "the same but locked up" are likely to encounter unpleasant surprises. A disciplined, cash-flow-aware approach is essential.