The Bubble No One Can Sell | Dan Rasmussen on the Private Equity Trap
The Bubble No One Can Sell | Dan Rasmussen on the Private Equity Trap  
Podcast: Excess Returns
Published On: Thu Jul 31 2025
Description: In this episode of Excess Returns, Justin and special guest host Kai Wu of Sparkline Capital are joined by Verdad’s Dan Rasmussen for a deep dive into the hidden risks lurking in private equity—and why they may be more dangerous than investors realize.Rasmussen, a long-time critic of the asset class, explains why the allure of illiquidity, stale pricing, and past outperformance has led to dangerous capital misallocations. Along the way, we explore the origins of the Yale model, the current liquidity crunch, volatility laundering, and whether small-cap value could be the better bet today. We also dig into bubbles, biotech, and whether AI will concentrate or diffuse economic power.🔑 Topics covered:Why private equity may not be what investors think it isThe original logic of the Yale model—and how it’s broken todayLeverage, small company risk, and the illusion of low volatilityHow private equity portfolios are “money traps” in disguiseSmall-cap value as public market private equityWhy biotech could be the next overlooked opportunityHow innovation bubbles spark long-term progressAI’s capital intensity and implications for Big Tech dominanceBehavioral risks in institutional vs. retail investing📍 Timestamps:00:00 – Why private equity could be a money trap03:00 – The over-allocation to small, low-margin, highly levered companies07:25 – Why private equity’s popularity may signal poor future returns14:30 – The Yale Model’s origin story and how it morphed19:25 – Collapse in private equity distributions23:34 – Volatility laundering and misleading risk metrics27:00 – What happens when private equity goes public31:00 – Do lockups help investor behavior—or prevent learning?35:10 – Could small-cap value be a better alternative to private equity?42:00 – Why biotech is the most beaten-up corner of small caps47:00 – Bubbles, innovation, and the role of speculative excess51:00 – AI, capital intensity, and a return to economic gravity54:00 – Will AI empower monopolies or smaller players?