Search for a command to run...

Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this compelling episode, seasoned investment adviser Alan from IEQ Capital ($42 billion AUM) reveals why both high and low risk tolerance can be dangerous traps for investors. He explores how understanding your true risk capacity requires painful experience and candid self-assessment (01:32), while sharing sophisticated strategies used by ultra-high-net-worth families. From the power of illiquidity premiums in private credit (08:54) to navigating complex capital calls and margin risks, Alan delivers institutional-grade insights on portfolio construction, GP selection, and the looming national debt crisis—offering ambitious professionals a masterclass in wealth preservation and growth.
Managing Partner at IEQ Capital, a registered investment adviser with $42 billion in assets under management and 260 professionals across eight US offices. With 36 years in the investment management industry, he specializes in alternative investments and serves on Limited Partner Advisory Committees for approximately 75% of the firm's 200+ illiquid investment vehicles.
Investment professional and podcast host exploring wealth management strategies and institutional investing. He conducts in-depth conversations with industry leaders on portfolio construction, risk management, and alternative investments for high-net-worth individuals.
Balance risk tolerance by conducting a candid self-assessment across three dimensions: cash reserves (3-12 months of expenses), spending needs analysis, and personal experience with market volatility. (01:32) The greatest protector is diversification—spreading assets across multiple holdings so no single event can create financial calamity.
Capture enhanced returns by allocating to private credit and illiquid investments that don't trade daily. (08:59) Target senior floating-rate loans yielding SOFR plus 5.5-7.5%, but only through diversified funds holding hundreds of underlying positions. Place these strategies in tax-advantaged accounts like IRAs to maximize after-tax returns.
Maintain 3-12 months of cash reserves to enable higher risk-taking in your investment portfolio. (04:30) This safety net allows you to take concentrated positions and weather short-term volatility without forced selling. Rather than timing markets with large cash positions, stay fully invested but ready to reallocate at the margins when opportunities arise.
Evaluate general partners using five critical factors before examining track records: team depth (no key-person risk), strategy consistency (zero style drift), appropriate fund sizing relative to previous raises, adequate staffing for capital deployment, and addressable market size. (33:43) Track record is a lagging indicator—focus on leading indicators that predict future franchise performance.
Understand the 5% rule: as long as the US grows faster than its average 4% borrowing cost, the debt dynamic remains sustainable. (45:56) When 10-year Treasury yields approach 5%, expect risk-asset selloffs and potential opportunities. Position portfolios to benefit from this reflexive relationship between growth, debt costs, and market cycles.