---
title: "The \"Fee Maze\" of High-End Quantitative Private Equity"
type: "News"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/278630110.md"
description: "With the increasing attention of high-net-worth clients and professional investors on quantitative private equity, the industry chain is developing rapidly but also facing challenges. Investors are often attracted by the rising net value curve, neglecting the complex cost structure. Recently, the \"Zhong X Private Equity Competition FOF\" product launched by X Wealth has performed excellently, with a cumulative net value growth rate of approximately 58% since its establishment in December 2021, significantly outperforming the 20% increase of the CSI 500 index during the same period. This product seeks to achieve excess returns through active management and invests in multiple private equity funds"
datetime: "2026-03-11T00:13:25.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/278630110.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/278630110.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/278630110.md)
---

# The "Fee Maze" of High-End Quantitative Private Equity

With the rapid development of the domestic capital market, more and more high-net-worth clients and professional investors are beginning to engage with quantitative private equity products.

However, the unique complexity, professionalism, and innovative characteristics of quantitative private equity products have also created an industry chain that is both rapidly growing and facing challenges.

From producers (private equity managers) to processors (FOF and MOM product creation institutions) to distributors (sales and direct sales institutions) and consumers (investors), the entire industry chain of quantitative private equity covers all aspects from production to consumption, and each segment is developing and evolving into a unique system.

At the same time, due to the rapid development of such products far exceeding the cognitive iteration of ordinary investors, the entire high-end wealth management market is playing out a game regarding "transparency."

Investors often fall into a "visual illusion": they only see the upward trend of the net value curve, while neglecting the complex cost structure behind this curve, as well as the difference between the "principal and interest" received and the displayed net value.

This is indeed a significant market question that tests individuals.

## High-end Wealth Management that "Outperforms the Index"

On the product shelf of X Wealth's private equity products at top brokerage wealth institutions, a new collective fund trust plan named "Foreign Trade Trust - Zhong X Wealth Index Enhanced FOF Competitive Version" (hereinafter referred to as "Zhong X Private Equity Competitive FOF") has recently been launched.

This product has attracted attention due to its performance since its release.

According to product operation data: since its establishment on December 30, 2021, as of February 27, 2026, the cumulative net value growth rate of this product is approximately 58%.

It is worth noting that during the same period, the CSI 500 Index increased by about 20%. This performance clearly outperforms the index and can be considered quite impressive.

But the story does not end there.

## Index Enhanced FOF

From the product strategy perspective, the aforementioned product is a typical CSI 500 Index Enhanced FOF.

The so-called index enhancement means that the investment goal of the product is to closely track the trend of the CSI 500 Index and, based on this, through the active management of fund managers (such as selecting individual stocks, adjusting weights, etc.), strive to achieve higher returns than the index itself, known as "excess returns."

The FOF (fund of funds) format means that it does not directly purchase stocks but instead diversifies investments across multiple other private equity funds, with these sub-funds executing the index enhancement strategy.

From the surface numbers alone, this product seems to have successfully achieved its "enhancement" goal.

## Product Name with "Hidden Secrets"

Many investors, when examining this report card, are often attracted by the "58%" cumulative net value and the "18%" index increase.

However, they easily overlook the three seemingly ordinary yet actually concealing secrets words in the product name:

——"Competitive Version."

> It is precisely this "suffix" that distinguishes it from conventional private equity FOFs on the market and hints at a completely different operational logic behind it
> 
> In conventional private equity fund of funds (FOF) products, managers typically disclose a clear list of their invested sub-funds, even highlighting the past performance of these sub-funds and the backgrounds of their fund managers as core selling points.
> 
> The above presentation aims to showcase their allocation logic and visually demonstrate their selection capabilities and portfolio advantages to investors, meaning that the FOF management institution is capable of constructing an investment portfolio of "strength accumulation + risk diversification" by selectively choosing well-known private equity firms in the market.

## Not Following the Norm

However, the "Zhong X Private Equity Competitive FOF" does not follow this norm.

In its official promotional materials, it does not specify any names of specific sub-fund managers or historical performance data.

Instead, it uses a set of "abstract" rhetoric: "Based on years of research accumulation, establish a multi-dimensional evaluation system... to select sub-fund managers with mature and stable quantitative models, who have long-term cooperation and high trust with Zhong X Wealth."

The latter seems to imply that the actual operation of this FOF product heavily relies on the decision-making ability of the wealth institution as an investment advisor.

The so-called "dynamic adjustment of survival of the fittest" is essentially a continuous selection process led by Zhong X Wealth:

> For example: When to replace sub-funds? Based on what criteria? Which institution is being replaced? These key pieces of information thus become non-public internal strategic details.
> 
> In other words, this FOF is not a simple "fund platter," but a "strategy container" deeply coordinated by Zhong X Wealth. What investors are purchasing is not the capability of a specific private equity firm, but Zhong X Wealth's judgment on its "trustworthiness" and "evaluation dimensions."

## "Visible Fee Items"

With capability comes a series of "changes" in product structure, such as fee items.

There is a simple yet often overlooked principle in the investment community: returns are virtual, costs are real. That is, regardless of how impressive the past performance of a product may be, what ultimately ends up in the investor's pocket is always the "net return" after all fees are deducted.

If the Zhong X Private Equity Competitive FOF reveals the uniqueness of this product in terms of underlying asset selection, then its fee structure further illustrates that every penny paid by investors corresponds to a complex profit distribution mechanism.

On the surface, this is a trust plan issued by Foreign Trade Trust, which is a common "channel model" for private equity FOFs in the current market.

**But what truly determines the direction of product operation and bears the responsibility for investment decisions is the investment advisor behind it.**

Let's break down this "fee list" item by item:

First, subscription fee: 1% (external deduction method)

This is a one-time fee paid by investors when they buy in. The so-called "external deduction method" means that if you invest 1 million yuan, only 990,000 yuan is actually used to purchase shares, with the remaining 10,000 yuan deducted as a handling fee in advance.

Second, annual fixed fee: a total of 0.75% per year

This part is the "basic operating cost" that must be accrued from the assets each year, mainly including three items: _Agency sales fee 0.52%: Paid to sales channels_

_Trust fee 0.2%: Paid to foreign trade trusts as a management service fee for the trust party_

_Custody fee 0.03%: Paid to the custodian bank, responsible for fund security and account verification_

## "Affordable" Excess Return Accrual

The above three items add up to less than 1%, which sounds quite cheap, right?

After all, this is a private wealth management product aimed at high-net-worth clients, and the excess performance commission is the real "big cost."

At least that's what it says in black and white on the product brochure.

The terms state: "For the portion of the holding period return that exceeds an annualized 8%, 5% will be accrued as a floating trust management fee."

It seems like a very "favorable" charge?

Generally speaking, mainstream private hedge funds or securities asset management plans often have a performance fee extraction logic of: "For the portion exceeding the performance benchmark, a direct 20% will be accrued." This means that once the product is profitable, the manager takes one-fifth of the excess profit.

However, this high-end wealth management product is not so "aggressive": it sets an annualized return threshold of 8%, and the extraction ratio is "only" 5%.

This "high threshold, low ratio" design superficially greatly benefits investors.

This is also the most confusing and easily perceived as "conscientious" aspect of this fee structure.

But is it really like that?

## The "Fee Maze" in Risk Warnings

The product brochure of the aforementioned private fund of funds (FOF) lists conventional items such as market risk, liquidity risk, and related party transaction risk.

But among this long list of professional terms, there is one seemingly plain yet crucial reminder:

"Double fee risk: Investors in this product may need to bear double-layer fees... The above fees will be deducted from the net value of the asset management products invested by this plan at the time of accrual, resulting in a decrease in the net value of this plan."

This sentence directly reveals the biggest source of hidden costs for this product: the "fee maze."

Let’s translate this obscure clause into plain language:

The "trust-level fees" (that 0.75% fixed fee + 5% floating commission) seen by readers earlier are merely the first layer of explicit costs;

The real second layer is hidden in the strategy promised at the beginning of the product—"allocating multiple quantitative managers' products through a process of elimination."

This means that Zhong X Wealth, as the investment advisor, primarily selects and buys these underlying quantitative funds that have undergone "survival of the fittest."

And these selected sub-funds are independent commercial entities that also need to survive and profit.

Therefore, when the FOF's funds enter the sub-funds to execute this "allocation strategy," regardless of whether there are fees at the FOF level, the sub-funds typically charge directly against this client capital:

_Subscription/Redemption Fee_

_Management Fee (fixed annual operating cost, usually 1%-2%)_

_Excess Performance Fee (20% profit-sharing after making money)_

## The "Net Value Shrinkage" That Cannot Be Ignored

Generally speaking, the fees of the underlying sub-funds in a Fund of Funds (FOF) are embedded in the net asset value and are rigid and non-waivable.

For example:

Assuming a certain quantitative fund earned 20% this year, it first deducts its management fees and performance commissions, and only the remaining profit is included in the FOF's net asset value;

Then, the FOF calculates the 5% floating commission based on this already reduced net asset value.

The result is:

**Investors do not actually save money due to the "low commission" at the FOF level.**

**On the contrary, due to the two rounds of fund flow through "sub-fund → FOF → investor," the friction costs at each layer are compounded.**

This structure is like a Russian nesting doll; when you peel away one layer (FOF fees), you find another layer inside (sub-fund fees).

For ordinary investors, this is not just a matter of "is it expensive or not," but also a transparency issue of "who are you really paying for."

Risk Warning and Disclaimer

The market has risks, and investment requires caution. This article does not constitute personal investment advice and does not take into account the specific investment objectives, financial situation, or needs of individual users. Users should consider whether any opinions, views, or conclusions in this article are suitable for their specific circumstances. Investing based on this is at your own risk

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