Fund Data

$
$
Cash + in-kind distributions to LPs
$
years
Years since first capital call
ILPA/GIPS Formulas
DPI = Distributions / Paid-In
RVPI = NAV / Paid-In
TVPI = DPI + RVPI
Ryan O'Connell, CFA
Calculator by Ryan O'Connell, CFA

Fund-Level Multiples

DPI Realized
0.60x
RVPI Unrealized
0.80x
Subject to change
TVPI Total Value
1.40x

Educational Heuristics

J-Curve Stage Mid (3-7 yrs) Based on fund age only
Implied Geometric Return* 6.96% Not a substitute for IRR

*Implied Geometric Return = TVPI(1/years) - 1. This simplified formula ignores distribution timing and can differ significantly from true IRR (money-weighted return). Use for rough comparison only.

Model Assumptions

Core Multiples (ILPA/GIPS Standards)
  • DPI, RVPI, and TVPI follow ILPA and GIPS standard definitions
  • All inputs must be from the same measurement date and on the same basis (gross or net)
  • NAV is GP-reported fair market value, subject to estimation uncertainty
  • Distributions include cash and in-kind distributions at fair value
Educational Heuristics (Not Standards)
  • J-curve stage is based on fund age only; actual J-curve depends on strategy, vintage, and market conditions
  • Implied geometric return assumes lump-sum terminal realization; does not account for distribution timing
  • For precise time-weighted returns, use the IRR calculator
Educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Consult fund documentation and professional advisors for investment decisions.

Understanding Private Equity Fund Multiples

What Are LP Multiples?

LP multiples (DPI, RVPI, TVPI) are the standard metrics used by limited partners to evaluate private equity fund performance. Unlike IRR, which accounts for the timing of cash flows, multiples show simple ratios of value to invested capital.

DPI (Realized)

Distributions / Paid-In
Cash and in-kind value actually returned to LPs. The only "real" multiple - money in the bank.

RVPI (Unrealized)

NAV / Paid-In
Remaining portfolio value per GP marks. Subject to valuation uncertainty and market risk.

TVPI vs MOIC vs IRR

These terms are often confused:

  • TVPI = Fund-level total value multiple (DPI + RVPI). Standard LP reporting metric.
  • MOIC = Multiple on Invested Capital. Often used at deal level but sometimes interchangeably with TVPI at fund level.
  • IRR = Internal Rate of Return. Money-weighted annualized return that accounts for cash flow timing.

This calculator computes fund-level multiples. For deal-level analysis, see the MOIC calculator. For time-weighted returns, use the IRR calculator.

The J-Curve Effect

Private equity funds typically show negative returns in early years due to:

  • Management fees charged on committed capital
  • Investment costs and capital deployment
  • Portfolio companies not yet mature

Returns typically improve in later years as portfolio companies are sold or IPO'd. The shape resembles a "J" when plotting cumulative returns over time.

Key Insight: A low DPI in years 1-3 is normal for most PE funds. Don't judge early-stage funds solely on DPI - focus on TVPI trend and manager track record.

Frequently Asked Questions

DPI measures the cash-on-cash return of a private equity fund. It equals cumulative distributions (both cash and in-kind at fair value) divided by paid-in capital. A DPI of 1.0x means the fund has returned all invested capital; above 1.0x indicates profit has been distributed. DPI only counts realized value - actual money returned to investors.

TVPI measures total fund value (realized + unrealized) relative to paid-in capital. TVPI = DPI + RVPI. A TVPI of 1.5x means the fund's total value (distributions plus remaining NAV) is 1.5 times the capital invested. TVPI is the most comprehensive performance multiple but includes unrealized NAV estimates that may change.

RVPI measures unrealized value remaining in the fund relative to paid-in capital. It equals the fund's current NAV divided by paid-in capital. RVPI represents potential future distributions but is subject to NAV estimation uncertainty and market risk. As a fund matures, RVPI should decline as positions are realized and converted to DPI.

The J-curve describes the typical pattern of private equity fund returns over time. In early years (roughly years 1-3), returns are often negative due to management fees charged on committed capital and investment costs while portfolio companies are being acquired and developed. Returns typically improve in later years as portfolio companies mature and are exited through sales or IPOs. The name comes from the J-shaped graph when plotting cumulative returns against time.

DPI/TVPI/RVPI are multiples (cash-on-cash ratios) that don't account for time. IRR (Internal Rate of Return) is a money-weighted annualized return that considers the timing of each cash flow. A fund with 2.0x TVPI over 10 years has a very different IRR than one achieving 2.0x in 5 years. Both metrics are important: multiples show total value creation while IRR shows the annualized rate of return considering when cash flows occurred.

TVPI benchmarks vary significantly by strategy (buyout, venture, growth), vintage year, geographic focus, and whether values are gross or net of fees. Below 1.0x indicates capital loss. Performance quartile cutoffs differ by strategy and vintage - a 1.8x TVPI might be median for one vintage but top-quartile for another. Always compare to relevant peer group benchmarks from sources like Cambridge Associates, Preqin, or Burgiss rather than using fixed thresholds.
Disclaimer

This calculator is for educational purposes only. DPI, RVPI, and TVPI calculations follow ILPA/GIPS standard definitions but actual fund reporting may vary. NAV values are estimates subject to GP valuation policies. The implied geometric return is a simplified heuristic and should not be used as a substitute for proper IRR analysis. Consult fund documentation and professional advisors for investment decisions.

Course by Ryan O'Connell, CFA, FRM

Portfolio Analytics & Risk Management

Master portfolio performance measurement, risk analytics, and alternative investment evaluation. Covers LP multiples, IRR, PME benchmarking, and institutional portfolio management.

  • Private equity performance metrics (DPI, TVPI, IRR)
  • Risk-adjusted return measures (Sharpe, Sortino, Information Ratio)
  • Public market equivalent (PME) analysis
  • Portfolio attribution and factor analysis