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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this episode, Alex Simpson, Co-founder of Liquid LP, discusses how his platform provides NAV loans backed by LP and GP interests in private funds. (00:08) The conversation explores how these loans work, how lenders underwrite illiquid portfolios, and when borrowing may be preferable to selling in the secondary market. (00:44) Simpson explains how different types of investors use these loans for personal liquidity, capital calls, tax needs, and portfolio rebalancing, with loan structures ranging from $1 million to $75 million at LTV ratios of 20-40%. (21:01)
Alex Simpson is the Co-founder of Liquid LP, a platform providing NAV loans backed by LP and GP interests in private funds. He has an entrepreneurial background, having started multiple companies in South Africa and Australia with mixed success. Simpson's experience spans the venture capital and fund business space, and he originally founded his current company to focus on lending against pre-IPO shares before pivoting to the LP segment based on market demand and product-market fit.
NAV loans allow investors to access liquidity while retaining ownership and future upside potential, unlike secondary sales which are permanent exits at discounts. (00:44) Simpson explains that this is "particularly attractive when someone has conviction on the underlying assets, but simply needs the liquidity for personal other business uses." (00:55) The key insight is that NAV loans provide optionality - you can access capital without sacrificing long-term investment returns. For professionals managing illiquid investments, this creates a strategic advantage by maintaining exposure to high-conviction positions while addressing immediate liquidity needs.
Interest rates on NAV loans typically range from high single digits to low-to-mid teens, with pricing heavily dependent on the underlying collateral quality. (01:59) Blue-chip funds command lower rates while venture-type assets fall on the higher end of the range. Simpson emphasizes they "look at diversification, the maturity of the fund" when determining rates. (02:04) This teaches professionals that building a diversified portfolio of high-quality fund investments not only reduces risk but also improves access to favorable financing terms when liquidity needs arise.
Liquid LP differentiates itself from major banks through bespoke service and faster execution times. (03:18) While banks focus on their existing clients and platform funds, Simpson's firm can complete loans in as little as two weeks for straightforward cases. (16:28) The lesson for professionals is that in financial services, specialized focus often beats comprehensive offerings. By concentrating on lending relationships rather than trying to provide wealth management services, they deliver superior speed and customization in their core competency.
The intended use of loan proceeds heavily influences both approval and terms, with business investments viewed more favorably than personal uses. (15:02) Simpson notes they prefer funding for "capital calls because then we know where the liquidity is being driven to from an asset allocation perspective." (15:10) This insight reveals that lenders view business-related borrowing as lower risk because they can track and evaluate the flow of funds. Professionals seeking financing should frame their capital needs in terms of strategic business objectives rather than personal consumption to secure better terms.
Building an effective advisory board requires careful timing and clear expectation setting with high-profile advisors. (24:01) Simpson learned from previous ventures that bringing on big names too early can be counterproductive because "they physically can't do much in the beginning because they're at a certain level where their impact is really more effective at their level." (24:11) The key is meeting advisors where they are in their careers and aligning their natural motivations with company needs, whether that's commercial success, personal impact, or mentoring opportunities.