SecondariesRIA · CRD 285065SEC-RegisteredPrivate Fund Adviser

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Omaha Beach Capital

Omaha Beach Capital was formed in 2014 in Aventura, Florida, as a specialized alternatives manager concentrated on private equity secondaries and...

Omaha Beach Capital

Omaha Beach Capital

Omaha Beach Capital was formed in 2014 in Aventura, Florida, as a specialized alternatives manager concentrated on private equity secondaries and co-investments. The firm operates a fund-of-funds platform that pools commitments into secondary market transactions, targeting the lower and middle market segments where pricing inefficiencies are more common and competition from larger secondary buyers is less acute. The firm's strategy revolves around acquiring LP interests in private equity funds on the secondary market and participating in direct secondary transactions — where portfolios of company stakes are restructured or sold by existing investors. Asset-class exposure spans buyout, growth equity, and co-investment vehicles, with the fund-of-funds architecture providing diversification across underlying managers. The geographic focus remains domestic US, with an emphasis on lower-middle-market buyout funds where Omaha Beach Capital can access discounted NAVs before the broader secondary market reprices them. The deployment model relies on sourcing from intermediaries and direct GP relationships rather than auctioned mega-portfolio sales. The firm maintains a lean structure operating from its Aventura headquarters. Estimated total commitments range between $100 million and $250 million (Altss estimate), positioning it as a niche allocator within the secondary fund-of-funds universe. The investment team's size has not been publicly disclosed, and no additional office locations have been confirmed. Omaha Beach Capital does not operate adjacent philanthropic foundations, real-asset arms, or membership-based co-investment clubs that are visible in public record. Omaha Beach Capital differentiates through concentration risk deliberately taken — it avoids the institutional secondary market's largest, most competitive transactions in favor of smaller, fragmented LP stakes that larger funds bypass. This structural posture means the firm's returns depend less on leverage and more on the GP relationships and valuation gaps present in the sub-$500 million transaction market that institutional secondary funds typically overlook.

General information

Firm type

Secondary

Year founded

2014

AUM

$100M – $250M (Altss estimate)

Location

Region

North America

Country

United States

City

Aventura

Corporate office

Aventura, FL, United States

Sector focus

Secondaries & Special SituationsBuyoutCo-Investment

Frequently asked questions

What differentiates Omaha Beach Capital's secondary strategy from larger institutional secondaries funds?

Omaha Beach Capital focuses on the lower and middle market segments of the private equity secondary market — transactions typically below $500 million that larger dedicated secondary funds bypass due to minimum deal-size thresholds. The fund-of-funds structure pools commitments to acquire LP interests and participate in direct secondary transactions where pricing inefficiencies are more pronounced and competition from institutional buyers is thinner. This posture places the firm closer to GP-led restructurings and LP interest sales that require more bespoke underwriting than the large-portfolio auctions dominated by firms like Lexington Partners or Blackstone Strategic Partners.

Does Omaha Beach Capital invest directly in companies, or only through fund commitments?

The firm operates predominantly as a secondary fund-of-funds manager, acquiring LP stakes in existing private equity funds on the secondary market. It also pursues co-investments and direct secondary transactions where portfolios of direct company stakes are restructured. The primary vehicle is the pooled fund commitment, but the firm's mandate accommodates direct exposure alongside GP relationships when the secondary opportunity involves taking down a concentrated set of underlying assets rather than a diversified LP interest.

What is the geographic scope of Omaha Beach Capital's investments?

The firm's investment mandate is domestic US-focused, sourcing secondary transactions from US-based lower-middle-market buyout and growth equity funds. There is no public indication of direct international fund commitments or cross-border secondary purchases, though the underlying portfolio companies of the funds it acquires may have global operations. The Aventura, Florida headquarters serves as the sole confirmed office location.

How does Omaha Beach Capital source its secondary transactions?

The firm sources through intermediaries specializing in the secondary market and through direct relationships with general partners managing lower-middle-market funds. Because Omaha Beach Capital targets smaller LP stake sales — often from family offices, smaller institutions, or funds undergoing GP-led restructurings — its sourcing relies on being known to regional and sector-focused intermediaries rather than competing in the broadly auctioned secondary processes run by investment banks for large pension or endowment portfolio sales.

Is Omaha Beach Capital a single-family office or an institutional fund manager?

Omaha Beach Capital is structured as an institutional alternatives manager — specifically a fund-of-funds manager — rather than a single-family office. The firm pools third-party commitments into secondary and co-investment vehicles. There is no public disclosure of a single-family wealth origin or a parent family office behind the firm; the entity operates as a traditional commingled-fund manager.

What investment stages and asset classes does Omaha Beach Capital target?

The firm targets private equity across buyout, growth equity, and co-investment exposures — all accessed through secondary-market purchases of LP interests or direct secondary portfolio acquisitions. The stage focus falls on mature fund vintages in the lower-middle-market, typically funds that are 3–7 years into their investment periods and where selling LPs seek liquidity before full realization. The secondary fund-of-funds wrapper means underlying exposure spans multiple managers rather than single-GP concentration.

Profile maintained by using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.

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