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General Partners

General Partners (GPs) are the pilots of the private investment world. Think of them as the elite management team for specialized investment pools like private equity funds, venture capital funds, and hedge funds. While their investors, known as Limited Partners (LPs), provide the bulk of the money, the GPs are the ones in the driver's seat. They are the ones with the investment thesis, the industry connections, and the operational expertise. Their job is to find promising private companies, buy them, help them grow, and then sell them for a handsome profit. This isn't a passive role; it's an intensely active, hands-on job. Crucially, GPs have unlimited liability, which means that unlike their LPs, their personal assets can be on the line if the fund's debts exceed its assets. This “skin in the game” ensures they have a powerful incentive to manage the fund's capital wisely.

The GP's Role: The Brains and the Brawn

A GP's job extends far beyond simply picking investments. They manage the entire lifecycle of a fund, a process that can span a decade or more. It's a marathon, not a sprint, broken down into distinct phases.

The Fund Lifecycle

How GPs Get Paid: The "Two and Twenty" Model

The compensation structure for GPs is designed to align their interests with those of their investors. The classic model, known as “2 and 20,” has two key parts.

Management Fee ("The Two")

This is a steady fee, typically 1.5% to 2% of the fund's total committed capital or assets under management (AUM). It's not profit; it's the budget used to cover the fund's operational costs—salaries for the investment team, office rent, travel, legal fees, and market research. This fee keeps the lights on while the GPs work to grow their investments, which can take many years to bear fruit.

Carried Interest ("The Twenty")

This is the big prize. Carried interest (or “carry”) is the GP's share of the fund's profits. It's a performance fee, traditionally 20% of the profits generated. However, there's a crucial catch: GPs only start collecting carry after the LPs have received their entire initial investment back, plus a pre-agreed minimum return, known as a hurdle rate (often around 8% per year). For example:

  1. An LP invests $10 million in a fund.
  2. The fund performs well, and that stake is now worth $30 million upon exit.
  3. First, the LP gets their original $10 million back.
  4. Then, the LP receives their preferred return (the hurdle).
  5. Of the remaining profit, the GP gets their 20% carry, and the LP keeps the other 80%.

This structure ensures that GPs are handsomely rewarded for generating exceptional returns, but only after their investors have already made a solid profit.

For the Everyday Investor: Why Should You Care?

While most individual investors won't be writing a multi-million dollar check to become an LP, understanding GPs is still vital.