RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Calculating Outperformance in Dollars: Introducing the Excess Value Method JF The Journal of Portfolio Management FD Institutional Investor Journals SP jpm.2021.1.234 DO 10.3905/jpm.2021.1.234 A1 Avi Turetsky A1 Matthew Pyrz A1 Barry Griffiths A1 Joaquin Lujan A1 Isaac Beckel YR 2021 UL https://pm-research.com/content/early/2021/03/13/jpm.2021.1.234.abstract AB This article introduces the excess value method for calculating the dollar value that a private market investment generates relative to a benchmark. To the authors’ knowledge, this is the first published method of doing so. It is based on the commonly used direct alpha and Kaplan–Schoar public market equivalent (KS-PME) measures of private market relative performance as a rate and multiple. The article demonstrates that direct alpha and KS-PME cannot be directly translated into dollar terms for all but the simplest cash flow streams. It thus introduces adaptations that enable this translation to take place algorithmically. The authors believe that excess value can give investors and fund managers useful insights into the value creation of private market investments over time and can facilitate an alternative to traditional carried interest compensation. Unlike carried interest, which compensates managers for absolute performance regardless of public market behavior, excess value–based performance fees enable performance compensation to be paid only for outperformance versus a public market benchmark.TOPICS: Real assets/alternative investments/private equity, performance measurementKey Findings▪ This article introduces the excess value method for calculating the dollar value a private market investment generates above or below a benchmark. It is based on the commonly used direct alpha and Kaplan–Schoar public market equivalent performance measures.▪ The excess value method introduces adaptations that enable dollar outperformance to be calculated algorithmically even for complicated cash flow streams.▪ Excess value can enable parties to measure dollar outperformance over time and to develop performance fee agreements that create better alignment by being based on a split of value in excess of an agreed benchmark rather than absolute returns.