A cross-sector survey of private fund documentation shows 25% emerging as the modal clawback limit on distributed carried interest, regardless of asset class. The convergence reflects three years of LP pressure following the 2020-2022 vintage mark-to-market volatility, when early distributions to general partners preceded portfolio company write-downs by 18 to 24 months. Fund administrators report the threshold appearing in 62% of new partnership agreements drafted since mid-2023, up from 41% in 2021.
The mechanics diverge sharply by fund type. Buyout funds typically calculate clawback exposure on a deal-by-deal basis, limiting GP liability to 25% of cumulative carry per realized investment. Venture and growth funds favor fund-as-a-whole calculations, permitting early-stage write-offs to offset later exits before triggering clawback. Credit funds, particularly those with quarterly liquidity features, use net-asset-value lookback periods ranging from 12 to 36 months, creating real-time exposure for GPs who distribute carry during rallies. The structural difference matters when a $500 million fund faces a $75 million impairment: buyout GPs claw back only against affected deals, while venture GPs may owe nothing if the fund remains above preferred return hurdles.
The standardization arrives as private credit redemptions accelerate and secondary pricing dislocations widen. LPs pulling capital at par from one credit vehicle now reinvest into secondaries trading at 82 to 88 cents on net asset value, a spread that has held since November 2024. The arbitrage depends on manager willingness to honor liquidity terms while carrying underwater positions, creating reflexive pressure on carry clawback triggers. When a GP distributes $12 million in carry from a performing loan book, then faces redemptions requiring asset sales at discounts, the 25% cap limits LP recovery to $3 million even if realized losses exceed early distributions by multiples.
Fund formation lawyers note increased GP resistance to clawback provisions tied to unrealized mark declines, a shift from 2022 practice. New language specifies clawback calculations occur only upon final fund liquidation or after a 10-year term expiration, insulating GPs from quarterly volatility. The structural change matters for continuation vehicles and GP-led secondaries, where clawback obligations transfer to new entities that may lack contractual enforcement mechanisms. LPs reviewing offering documents should focus on three variables: whether the 25% cap applies to gross or net carry, whether it compounds across multiple clawback events, and whether escrow periods extend beyond standard 12-month holdbacks.
Watch for revised clawback disclosure in Form ADV amendments due by March 2025, particularly from credit managers with $2 billion or more in regulatory assets. The SEC's August 2023 private fund rules require standardized clawback term disclosure, forcing managers to reconcile fund-level variance with regulatory template language. Funds closing between now and mid-2025 will likely adopt the 25% threshold as baseline, with negotiation centering on calculation methodology rather than cap level. The standardization functions as market infrastructure, reducing legal negotiation friction while preserving GP-favorable structural choices in execution mechanics.