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  2. Carried interest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carried_interest

    Structure of a private equity or hedge fund, which shows the carried interest and management fee received by the fund's investment managers. The general partner is the financial entity used to control and manage the fund, while the limited partners are the individual investors. The investment managers work as the general partner and are also a ...

  3. Distribution waterfall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_waterfall

    The catchup is defined by two elements: an allocation (usually 80% to 100% allocated to the GP), and a target (defined by the carried interest, typically 20% for the GP). Example: First, 100% to the investors (LPs) until they receive their Preferred Return; Then, a catchup of 80 to 100% to the GP until the GP has received 20% of the cumulative ...

  4. Taxation of private equity and hedge funds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxation_of_private_equity...

    Structure of a private equity or hedge fund, which shows the carried interest and management fee received by the fund's investment managers. The general partner is the financial entity used to control and manage the fund, while the limited partners are the individual investors who receive their return as capital interest.

  5. What Carried Interest Is, and Why You Should Care - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2014-03-09-what-carried...

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  6. UPDATE 1-Private equity, hedge funds object to U.S. carried ...

    www.aol.com/news/1-private-equity-hedge-funds...

    Carried interest refers to a longstanding Wall Street tax break that let many private equity and hedge fund financiers pay the lower capital gains tax rate on much of their income, instead of the ...

  7. Performance fee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Performance_fee

    If, in the worked example, there had been a hurdle of 4%, the performance fee would only have been charged on the additional 6% increase rather than the full 10% increase in NAV. As hurdles reduce the size of performance fees and reward successful active management, they are popular with investors.

  8. How to calculate loan payments and costs - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/calculate-loan-payments...

    You can use a calculator or the simple interest formula for amortizing loans to get the exact difference. For example, a $20,000 loan with a 48-month term at 10 percent APR costs $4,350.

  9. Free cash flow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_cash_flow

    Unlevered free cash flow (i.e., cash flows before interest payments) is defined as EBITDA − CAPEX − changes in net working capital − taxes. This is the generally accepted definition. If there are mandatory repayments of debt, then some analysts utilize levered free cash flow, which is the same formula above, but less interest and ...