A clawback obligation represents the general partner’s promise that, over the life of the fund, the managers will not receive a greater share of the fund’s distributions than they bargained for. Generally, this means that the general partner may not keep distributions representing more than a specified percentage (e.g., 20%) of the fund’s cumulative profits, if any. When triggered, the clawback will require that the general partner return to the fund’s limited partners an amount equal to what is determined to be "excess" distributions. Click here for more detail
For more information on this topic, try one of the following options:
Both buy-side and sell-side professionals use the Portfolio Company Analysis Tool to drastically reduce the time it takes to analyze an investment or financing event and model related exit scenarios. The system produces a wide range of tabular and graphical outputs that explain the precise impact of valuation and deal terms on investment returns. The Valuation & Deal Term Database provides more financial data points than any other information source for institutionally backed, high growth companies, including "click through" access to source documents on which our analysis is based.