Coverage · APAC

APAC LP and GP coverage

Coverage across Asia-Pacific — Japanese and Korean pensions, Singaporean sovereigns, Australian super funds, Hong Kong and Singapore family offices, and regional GPs. One of the most diverse LP regions globally, with distinct national dynamics that legacy databases flatten.

What's covered

Northeast Asia

Japan — GPIF (largest pension globally), corporate pensions, major insurance (Nippon Life, Dai-ichi, Tokio Marine). Korea — KIC, NPS, insurance and pension funds. Taiwan — BoLF. Greater China — Hong Kong-based Chinese capital, QFLP programs.

Southeast Asia

Singapore — GIC, Temasek, MAS, Singaporean family offices (SFO, VCC). Malaysia — EPF, KWAP. Thailand — GPF, Thai family wealth. Indonesia, Vietnam, Philippines — sovereign and emerging coverage.

Oceania

Australia — superannuation funds (AustralianSuper, Aware Super, UniSuper, Rest), Australian family offices, Future Fund. New Zealand — NZ Super Fund and institutional capital.

India

Indian pension authorities (EPFO, LIC, SBI Life). Indian family office wealth (rapidly growing). Indian GPs and growth equity managers.

Why APAC coverage matters

APAC hosts some of the largest institutional private markets allocators globally — GPIF (Japan), NPS (Korea), GIC and Temasek (Singapore), Australian super funds, and Future Fund (Australia) collectively represent trillions in AUM. Regional family office wealth is concentrated and growing rapidly, particularly in Singapore (which has become a global family office hub), Hong Kong, Tokyo, and Mumbai.

APAC is notoriously hard to map from US- or Europe-based systems. Multiple languages, regulatory regimes, and business cultures mean that flat databases treat APAC as a single region when it's actually 12+ distinct LP markets. Altss's regional OSINT pipelines (including Japanese, Korean, Chinese, and Southeast Asian language monitoring) give native-quality intelligence per market.

National-level dynamics

Japan

GPIF's private markets allocation is one of the most important capital flows in global alternatives. Japanese corporate pensions are increasingly allocating internationally. Insurance companies (Nippon, Dai-ichi, Meiji Yasuda) are major alternatives LPs. Japanese GPs and corporate venture arms are distinct from Western patterns.

Korea

NPS, KIC, and Korean insurance (Samsung Life, Hanwha Life) are sophisticated alternatives LPs. Korean private wealth has grown dramatically. Korean GPs are emerging as regional powerhouses, particularly in tech and consumer.

Singapore

GIC and Temasek are among the most strategically important LPs globally. Singapore has become the premier APAC family office hub via the VCC structure and Section 13O/U schemes.

Australia

Super fund consolidation has created mega-allocators (AustralianSuper alone manages over A$350B). Supers are increasingly building in-house PM capability and executing direct investments alongside fund commitments.

Hong Kong

Historically the dominant APAC family office hub; Singapore has claimed significant share in recent years. HK remains critical for Chinese-diaspora wealth and strategic Asian family capital.

India

Still institutionalizing private markets allocation. Indian family office wealth growing rapidly as Indian entrepreneurial wealth scales. Indian GPs attracting international LP interest.

Language and regional considerations

Altss's APAC coverage includes native-language signal monitoring where it matters most — Japanese regulatory filings and press, Korean pension fund disclosures, Chinese-language OSINT, and Southeast Asian regulatory filings. This is critical for surfacing mandate signals that English-only databases miss entirely.

Business cycle considerations: Japanese fiscal year (April-March), Chinese New Year effects on deployment, Korean government policy update cycles, and Australian superannuation annual reporting cadence all affect LP mandate timing. Altss flags these in the platform.

F.A.Q

Frequently asked questions

Do you cover GPIF and Japanese corporate pensions?
Yes. GPIF allocation activity, major Japanese corporate pension allocation programs, and insurance company institutional allocation tracked.
How deep is Singapore family office coverage?
Strong and growing. Singapore's VCC and 13O/U regime has formalized thousands of single-family offices, improving coverage. Family office coverage reflects public registrations and OSINT signals.
Do you cover Chinese LPs?
Coverage of Hong Kong-based Chinese capital, QFLP programs, and publicly observable mainland institutional activity. Mainland Chinese capital coverage is affected by regulatory context.
Do you cover Australian super fund allocations?
Yes. Australian supers are major disclosed allocators; allocation data quality is strong.
How do you handle Korean language OSINT?
Native Korean-language monitoring for pension announcements, regulatory updates, and press. Critical for catching NPS and KIC mandate shifts in real time.
Pricing?
Standard per-seat $12K/$15.5K. Enterprise 5-seat $30K/$40K.

See APAC LP coverage for your strategy.

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