Fee Structures Serious Investors Will Accept (and Those They Won't)
A market scan of management and performance fees, hurdles, catch-ups and carry, with practical guidance for sponsors.
Why this matters for sponsors raising capital
The sponsors who close fastest are not the ones with the best deals — they are the ones who make it easiest for serious investors to say yes. This article unpacks one specific piece of that operational machinery and how to get it right the first time.
Aqmār works with sponsors directly to standardise these pieces so submission moves from artisanal to institutional. The result is shorter time-to-close and a wider investor pool.
What investors are looking for
Sophisticated allocators are not looking for slick presentation; they are looking for evidence of operational seriousness. Honest disclosure, complete documentation, sensible structure, and answers that match the documents.
We outline the specific signals investors read as positive — and the small details that quietly disqualify otherwise good deals.
The minimum viable package
A practical list of documents, data, and disclosures that should be ready before opening a capital raise. Sponsors who launch before the minimum is in place spend the campaign reactively producing materials — which delays close, signals disorganisation, and reduces conversion.
Get the package right before announcing. The raise itself becomes a delivery exercise instead of a scramble.
The global angle
Cross-border raising adds layers: structure must work for multiple residencies, reporting must satisfy multiple regulators, and tax must be modelled for multiple investor types. We map the additional pieces sponsors need to include when raising internationally.
Done right, the international raise is a meaningfully larger pool with similar discipline. Done badly, it is a tax-and-compliance nightmare.
Ready to invest with structure?
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