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Mitchell G. Patton

13916 Posts
Why are secondaries becoming a mainstream private market strategy?

The Rise of Secondaries: A Mainstream Private Market Tactic

Secondaries refer to transactions in which investors buy and sell existing interests in private market funds or assets, rather than committing capital to new, primary investments. Historically, these transactions were niche, often driven by distressed sellers seeking liquidity. Today, secondaries have evolved into a core private market strategy, spanning private equity, private credit, real assets, and venture capital.The growth of secondaries reflects structural changes in how private markets operate, how investors manage portfolios, and how capital seeks efficiency in an uncertain macroeconomic environment.The Structural Forces Driving Mainstream AdoptionSeveral long-term forces explain why secondaries have moved from the margins to the…
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Value vs. Growth vs. Quality: Investor Styles Across Cycles

Value vs. Growth vs. Quality: Investor Styles Across Cycles

Investors often categorize equities into value, growth, and quality styles to structure portfolios and expectations. Comparing these styles over a full market cycle—from expansion to peak, contraction, and recovery—helps investors understand why leadership rotates and how diversification can improve outcomes. A full cycle typically spans several years and includes changing economic growth, inflation, interest rates, and risk appetite.An Overview of the Three StylesValue: Stocks trading at relatively low prices compared with fundamentals such as earnings, book value, or cash flow. Common metrics include price-to-earnings and price-to-book ratios.Growth: Companies expected to grow revenues and earnings faster than the market average, often…
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France: How companies finance innovation while managing labor and compliance obligations

France: Innovation, Workforce, Compliance Solutions

France blends an extensive public safety net and fairly protective labor regulations with a robust landscape of public incentives, bank lending, venture capital, and corporate R&D. This combination offers both advantages and limitations: firms can tap into diverse funding avenues to support innovation, yet they must also navigate substantial labor‑related expenses and compliance duties that shape the cost structure and scheduling of innovation initiatives.Scale and contextR&D intensity: France’s gross domestic spending on research and development is roughly in the low 2-percent range of GDP, below the aspirational 3-percent target adopted by some members of the European Union. That means public…
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How cities prepare for more intense heat waves

Urban Planning: How Cities Tackle Extreme Heat

Cities around the world face more frequent, longer and hotter heat waves as climate change continues to raise average temperatures and amplify extremes. Urban areas are especially vulnerable because the urban heat island effect concentrates heat: paved surfaces, dense buildings and low vegetation can raise local temperatures by 1–7°C relative to nearby rural areas. Preparing for this new normal requires a mix of near-term emergency measures, longer-term planning, infrastructure upgrades, public health interventions and community-focused equity work.The challenge: why intense heat waves are a growing urban riskHeat waves increase risks of heat illness, cardiovascular and respiratory events, and death. Notable…
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