How one fund manager is preparing for the market liquidity crisis
Cracked earth is seen at the almost empty Itaim dam, which is responsible for providing water to the Itu metropolitan area in Itu, Brazil. · Yahoo Finance · AP Photo

North Carolina-based fund manager Mark Yusko, the CIO of $4 billion fund-of-funds Morgan Creek Capital, has a solution for those investors who are worried about liquidity in the market — or lack of it.

Think like an endowment.

"We think if you’re going to not get the liquidity of the public markets, why not accept the illiquidity of the private markets?" Yusko said in an interview with Real Vision Television.

Yusko, the former CIO of The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Endowment, explained that endowments take a portion of their assets and place them in illiquid assets. The average person can do this too with their assets.

The key to thinking like an endowment is to understand you're not going to spend that money, but instead you'll spend the gains and the income. You also have to have the mindset that you don't need to liquidate it all tomorrow, so why not get paid for holding it, he explained.

The way to think about it is that your personal assets should be divided into three buckets.

“Everyone should have three buckets. Every investor needs three buckets— the 'liquidity bucket’ to fund their lifestyle. That’s two times your spending. If you spend 5% a year that 10, you spend 7% a year, that’s 14," he told Real Vision.

Morgan Creek Capital's Mark Yusko encourages investors to think like an endowment in this low liquidity environment in an interview on Real Vision TV.
Morgan Creek Capital's Mark Yusko encourages investors to think like an endowment in this low liquidity environment in an interview on Real Vision TV.

Basically, the average investor needs two years of whatever they spend to be in very liquid assets to fund their lifestyle expenses.

"Then, you need the 'get rich bucket,’ that’s 10 to 15% to do the crazy stuff like your friend’s condo deal, your brother-in-law’s venture deal. You’re going to ‘lose’ all that. So keep it small," he said.

The "get rich bucket" could be anything from a partner's share in a business to a landlord's share in an apartment building. It's the thing that generates cash, and in some ways excess income. It's how you get rich. That bucket is going to be filled up with whatever you do to get rich.

"And that leaves 70% in the middle, maybe up to 80%, for the 'stay rich bucket.’ And the 'stay rich bucket,' you’re never going to touch... Most of that money is going to go to your kids, your grandkids, your philanthropy. So you don’t need it. So take advantage of the illiquidity premium in the private markets and do the things we talked about that make sense today.”

The "stay rich bucket" has to be diversified and should be run like an endowment or a foundation with broad diversification. It can't be too heavy in one asset because then you run the risk of volatility or a loss and it can't be purely illiquid.

'Liquidity is a coward'

The lack of liquidity is viewed as one of those unintended consequences of regulations following the financial crisis, specifically Dodd-Frank.