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The current stagnation in private equity exits and distributions has dampened traditional buyout fundraising. In response, investor capital is flowing into secondary funds that provide liquidity and infrastructure funds benefiting from technology trends like AI.

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Sophisticated investors no longer use secondaries just to quickly build a private equity program. The strategy has matured into a core allocation, valued for offering faster deployment, better cash flow control, and consistent performance across market cycles.

The creation of tertiary funds—funds that buy LP interests in secondary funds—indicates that private markets are so starved for liquidity that capital is being layered multiple levels away from the actual value-creating companies. This complex financial engineering mirrors the CDOs of the 2008 crisis and suggests a potential market top.

The inability to return capital to LPs constrains new fundraising, creating an environment that cannot support the thousands of PE funds operating today. This will trigger a shakeout of weaker GPs, while the top 10 funds, already capturing 36% of capital, further consolidate their dominance.

PE firms are struggling to sell assets acquired in 2020-21, causing distributions to plummet from 30% to 10% annually. This cash crunch prevents investors from re-upping into new funds, shrinking the pool of capital and further depressing the PE-to-PE exit market, trapping investor money.

Private equity's reliance on terminal value for returns has created a liquidity crunch for LPs in the current high-rate environment. This has directly spurred demand for fund finance solutions—like NAV lending and GP structured transactions—to generate liquidity and support future fundraising.

While private equity purchase activity tripled over the last decade, acquisitions by strategic buyers remained flat. This creates a massive, underappreciated supply/demand imbalance, as strategics historically accounted for 60% of PE exits, leaving a $3.6 trillion backlog of unsold companies.

An estimated 15-20% of all private equity "distributions" in the last two years were not traditional sales or IPOs, but "inorganic" transactions like continuation funds and NAV loans. This means the actual yield from organic, market-driven exits is even lower than the already-dismal headline numbers suggest.

Total private asset fundraising was flat, but this masks a crisis in buyouts, where fundraising fell 16%. The cause is an unprecedented four-year stretch of low distributions to LPs (below 15% of NAV), straining their ability to recommit capital and doubling capital recycling timelines from four to eight years.

With fund lifecycles stretching well beyond the traditional 10 years, LPs are increasingly seeking liquidity through secondary sales. This trend isn't just a sign of pressure but a necessary market evolution to manage illiquid, long-duration assets.

With exits taking longer and becoming scarcer, the traditional 10-year, finite-life fund model is poorly suited to the current market. This structural problem is forcing the industry to rely more on liquidity solutions like secondaries and continuation vehicles, fundamentally altering the PE business model.