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Glossary

MOIC (Multiple of Invested Capital)

A private equity performance metric that measures total value returned to investors as a multiple of the original capital invested — calculated by dividing total distributions plus residual value by total invested capital.

What Is MOIC?

Multiple of invested capital (MOIC) — also called multiple on invested capital, total value to paid-in (TVPI), or simply “the multiple” — is a fundamental investment performance measure. As Investopedia describes, it measures how many times an investor gets their money back from an investment. A MOIC of 2.5x means the investor received $2.50 for every $1.00 invested.

MOIC is one of the two primary return metrics in private equity, alongside IRR. While IRR captures the time-weighted return, MOIC captures the absolute magnitude of value creation.

How MOIC Is Calculated

MOIC = (Total Distributions + Residual Value) ÷ Total Invested Capital

For a realised (exited) investment:

MOIC = Total Proceeds ÷ Total Invested Capital

For a partially realised investment, the residual value is based on the current fair market value of the remaining position.

Example

A PE firm invests $50M in a company and, over five years, receives $25M in dividends and sells the company for $100M:

MOIC = ($25M + $100M) ÷ $50M = 2.5x

MOIC Benchmarks

PerformanceMOICInterpretation
Below expectations< 1.5xMarginal return, may not justify illiquidity
Acceptable1.5–2.0xSatisfactory but unremarkable
Strong2.0–3.0xGood value creation
Exceptional3.0–5.0xOutstanding performance
Home run> 5.0xExtraordinary, fund-defining investment

Top-quartile buyout funds typically deliver net MOIC of 1.8–2.5x, while top-decile funds may exceed 3.0x.

DPI (Distributions to Paid-In)

DPI = Total Distributions ÷ Total Invested Capital

Measures only cash actually returned to investors — excludes unrealised residual value. DPI is the most conservative return metric because it counts only money in the investor’s pocket (Corporate Finance Institute).

RVPI (Residual Value to Paid-In)

RVPI = Residual Value ÷ Total Invested Capital

Measures the unrealised portion of the fund’s value. RVPI depends on fair value estimates, which are inherently subjective.

Relationship

TVPI (MOIC) = DPI + RVPI

As a fund matures and exits investments, RVPI converts to DPI. A fully liquidated fund has RVPI of zero and TVPI equals DPI.

MOIC vs. IRR

The two metrics capture different dimensions of performance:

MOICIRR
What it measuresAbsolute value creationAnnualised rate of return
Time sensitivityNo — does not penalise holding periodYes — rewards faster returns
Intuitive?Very — “how many times did I get my money back?”Moderately — requires financial literacy
Manipulation riskLow — based on actual cash flowsHigher — sensitive to timing of capital calls and distributions
When it matters mostEvaluating total wealth creationComparing across strategies and time periods

Smart investors consider both metrics together — a principle central to sound M&A valuation methods. A 3.0x MOIC over ten years (roughly 12% IRR) tells a different story than 3.0x over three years (roughly 44% IRR).

MOIC in Fund Reporting

Fund managers report MOIC at multiple levels:

  • Deal-level MOIC — return on each individual portfolio company
  • Fund-level MOIC — aggregate return across all investments in a fund
  • Gross vs. net — before and after management fees and carried interest
  • Vintage year comparison — benchmarking against peer funds of the same vintage

MOIC in Asia Pacific

MOIC achievement in Asia Pacific PE investments is influenced by several regional factors, many of which are explored in our analysis of APAC private equity trends. Longer hold periods are common in some markets (particularly Japan and South Korea), where exit processes may take more time. Currency translation effects can enhance or erode MOIC when converting local currency returns to a fund’s base currency. The growing maturity of exit markets across the region — including a deepening pool of secondary buyers and increasing IPO activity — is supporting stronger MOICs for well-managed portfolio companies. AI-native platforms like Amafi help PE firms identify value creation opportunities that support strong multiples across Asia Pacific investments.

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