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Perspectives JAN 2018 2018 Market Preview: Private Equity RELATIVE OPPORTUNITY FUELING GROWTH Private equity investors in 2017 benefited from strong overall industry performance, with U.S. funds up 12% YTD, 1 exceeding the growth of U.S. small cap equities with the Russell 2000 up 11% over the same time horizon. This year international private equity funds have broadly outperformed U.S. private equity funds, reversing the consistent outperformance delivered by U.S. funds since the credit crisis, with buyout funds on average producing the strongest performance across the industry up 17% YTD 2 and with venture funds lagging, only up 9% YTD. 3 Derek Schmidt, CFA, CAIA Senior Research Analyst, Private Equity 2017 will best be remembered for the robust fundraising efforts of private equity managers as they collected over $400 billion of global commitments. Investors continue to pour capital into the private equity market as they seek attractive relative returns in an increasingly expensive market. We believe institutional portfolios that can withstand the illiquidity risk should have or maintain reasonable exposure to private equity as asset class returns are likely to continue to outpace the future returns of most other asset classes, improving the overall risk-adjusted returns of portfolios. CHICAGO BALTIMORE PHILADELPHIA ST. LOUIS

Exhibit 1: Average U.S. Private Equity Fundraising $600 25 Average Fund Size Raised ($ Millions) $500 $400 $300 $200 $100 $- 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Q3 20 15 10 5 0 Average Months Fundraising Average Private Equity Fund Closed Average # of Months Fundraising Sources: Pitchbook, Preqin Exhibit 2: Collective Industry Fundraising and Dry Powder $1,400 Global Capital Raised ($ Billions) $1,200 $1,000 $800 $600 $400 $200 $0 Sources: Pitchbook, Preqin Annual Capital Raised Global PE Dry Powder Strong fundraising has built the level of dry powder across the industry to over $1.4 trillion. Fundraising accelerated in 2017 due to an increase in the average fund size to $542 million, up 33% YoY, aided by the significant growth of buyout funds in the upper-middle market combined with the successful raises of two of the largest funds on record with SoftBank s $93 billion Vision Fund and Apollo s $24.7 billion Fund IX. Additionally, fundraising has benefited from the expanding number of funds investing in private credit, international, and emerging markets. 2

Exhibit 3: Market Capitalization: U.S. Private Equity vs. U.S. Equity % of the Wilshire 5000 Total Market Cap 14% 12% 10% 8% 6% 4% 2% 0% U.S. Dry Powder U.S. PE NAV Total U.S. PE AUM Sources: Pitchbook, Bloomberg From an overall capitalization perspective the U.S. private equity industry has actually declined over the last seven years relative to the U.S. public markets. This is primarily due to rising valuations which have contributed more to the strong public market performance over this cycle. The market environment has presented many opportunities for managers as elevated valuations, the duration of this market cycle, and aging populations are attracting high quality private businesses to market. Many business founders from the baby boomer generation are selling their companies to private equity firms as they near retirement, lack a logical successor, or are simply attracted to sell at these high valuation levels. Buyout Transaction Values ($ Billions) Exhibit 4: Global Transaction Volumes $180 $160 $140 $120 $100 $80 $60 $40 $20 $0 Source: Morningstar as of December 31, 2009 and December 31, 2017 Source: Preqin PE Buyout Exit Value PE Buyout Deal Value Avg. Deal Value Avg. Exit Value 3

Private equity managers must now work harder to uncover attractive investments, which requires expanded sourcing and thoughtful underwriting efforts. Despite the rising levels of dry powder, transaction volume is consistent with recent historical levels, with far fewer mega deals, and high valuations have slowed the pace of capital deployment. In fact, industry transaction volume is substantially below the peak levels experienced in 2006 and 2007. Exit activity remained lighter than expected as both strategic and financial acquirers were reluctant to deploy capital at elevated valuations ahead of potential tax reform. Venture and growth equity exits were also lighter due to a few high profile IPO failures, primarily Snap and Blue Apron which have since declined nearly 50% and 68%, respectively. Private equity funds typically deploy capital over the first 4 6 years of the fund; the light transaction volume and growing dry powder indicates the industry is hesitant to deploy capital at these multiples and quality businesses were reluctant to sell prior to tax reform. However, managers are careful not to wait too long since funds charge fees on undeployed capital which can diminish future returns. Due to this dynamic, we believe transaction volumes are unsustainably low and should point to an inflection in transaction volume over the next few years. Exhibit 5: Investment Opportunity Set: U.S. Private Equity vs. U.S. Public Equity 8,000 U.S. Companies 7,000 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 7,168 4,331 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 # of U.S. Publicly Traded Companies # of U.S. PE-backed Companies Sources: Pitchbook, Worldbank The industry continues to expand as new investors and managers are attracted to the broader investable opportunity set within private markets. The robust levels of private capital available should continue to allow businesses to remain private longer, as private equity managers take their turn strategically improving and growing privately held companies into larger and more sustainable enterprises. Over time we should see additional growth in the investable universe as the industry further penetrates the 6+ million privately owned businesses in the U.S. 4

Across the private equity industry valuations have trended higher, partly due to improving fundamentals for small businesses in the U.S., and partly due to an increasingly attractive sellers market, as strategic and financial buyers are anticipated to deploy capital over the next few years. It should be noted, however, that these valuations now averaging 10.7x EBITDA still remain well below public market valuations. Throughout this growth cycle private valuations have not risen as significantly as they have in the public markets. Over the last decade valuations for private equity have averaged a 20-40% discount to the Russell 2000 (Exhibit 6). Exhibit 6: Valuations: U.S. Private Equity vs. U.S. Equity 12x 140% U.S. Buyout Multiples (EV / EBITDA) 10x 8x 6x 4x 2x 9.0x 9.0x 9.7x 7.8x 8.3x 8.2x 7.5x 10.3x 9.7x 10.0x 10.7x 10.5x 120% 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% PE valuations relative to Russell 2000 0x 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Q3 EV / EBITDA % of Russell 2000 Sources: S&P Capital IQ, Bloomberg 0% LOOKING FORWARD TO 2018 In evaluating the pipeline of funds expected to fundraise in 2018 assuming the capital markets hold up we are likely to see another very strong fundraising environment as the investor appetite for private equity remains elevated. In an overall expensive market, private valuations are less inflated which should continue to attract capital from valuation sensitive investors as they rebalance portfolios. However, we believe 2018 is more likely to be defined by a significant increase in volume and size of market transactions as capital is deployed following tax reform and consecutive years of aggressive fundraising. With a growing supply-demand imbalance, we believe private market valuations are likely to be supported at these levels as capital is deployed. This sellers market should deliver strong returns for existing investors while generating a slightly lower return for recent and future investors. The reduced benefit from multiple expansion and increased pressure to deploy capital is likely to widen the dispersion of industry fund returns. High quality managers with established track records, dedicated resources, strong sourcing capabilities, rigorous underwriting, and the ability to actively contribute to the growth of small and mid-sized companies should separate the performance of funds within recent and future vintages. We believe tax reform will ultimately have a positive impact on the private equity industry due to the significant reduction of the effective corporate tax to 21%. Undoubtedly, the most critical threat for the industry centers on 5

the reduced deductibility of interest expense. When acquiring a company, it is common for private equity firms to borrow 50 65% of the transaction value from either a bank or private credit fund. The private equity fund has historically been able to write-off all of the interest expense from this loan, but tax reform has now limited the deduction to 30% of EBITDA. This limitation will limit the use of more aggressive capital structures and reduce investment returns from managers focused on the mid-to-large buyout market where more leverage is most commonly used on stable business acquisitions. As structured, these tax reform measures are inherently procyclical, as they significantly lower the effective tax rates on businesses which should help to accelerate their growth which more than offsets the negative impact from the change in interest deductibility. However, in a less favorable market environment the reduction of interest deductibility may require a struggling business to pay a larger portion of its declining profits in taxes, thus increasing the financial stress on the business. Exhibit 7: Transaction Multiples: Buyout Multiples by Enterprise Value Buyout Multiples (Enterprise Value / EBITDA) 12.0x 11.0x 10.0x 9.0x 8.0x 7.0x 6.0x 5.0x 11.5x 9.9x 7.1x 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Avg. Middle Market EV <$100m EV $100m - $499m EV $500m - $1B Source: 2018 Middle-Market M&A Outlook - Robert W. Baird & Co. We believe investor focus in 2018 should remain on high quality managers within the small buyout market. These managers should see attractive opportunities generating above market returns as they benefit from persistent market inefficiencies. In this increasingly competitive environment, small businesses should continue to benefit the most from a private equity firm s active management approach and strategic advice to accelerate growth. Furthermore, the successful scaling of small businesses should allow for multiple expansions as the business is more efficiently sold into a significantly larger pool of capital. 1 Based on preliminary performance of the Cambridge Associates LLC U.S. Private Equity Index through September 30, 2017 2 Based on preliminary performance of Cambridge Associates Global Buyout Index through September 30, 2017 3 Based on preliminary performance of Cambridge Associates Venture Capital Index through September 30, 2017 6

PREPARED BY MARQUETTE ASSOCIATES 180 North LaSalle St, Ste 3500, Chicago, Illinois 60601 PHONE 312-527-5500 CHICAGO I BALTIMORE I PHILADELPHIA I ST. LOUIS WEB marquetteassociates.com The sources of information used in this report are believed to be reliable. Marquette Associates, Inc. has not independently verified all of the information and its accuracy cannot be guaranteed. Opinions, estimates, projections and comments on financial market trends constitute our judgment and are subject to change without notice. References to specific securities are for illustrative purposes only and do not constitute recommendations. Past performance does not guarantee future results. About Marquette Associates Marquette Associates is an independent investment consulting firm that guides institutional investment programs with a focused client service approach and careful research. Marquette has served a single mission since 1986 enable institutions to become more effective investment stewards. Marquette is a completely independent and 100% employee-owned consultancy founded with the sole purpose of advising institutions. For more information, please visit www.marquetteassociates.com. 7