The secondary market faces a potential capital shortage. The total available dry powder (~$200B) nearly equals the transaction volume expected this year alone. This tight supply-demand balance suggests a favorable risk-reward for new capital entering the space.

Related Insights

Media reports of "manic activity" in secondaries are misleading. The market isn't irrational; it's simply experiencing massive growth. Annual volume has surged from ~$40 billion to over $200 billion in a decade, making experienced buyers exceptionally busy.

The term 'private equity' is now insufficient. The M&A market's capital base has expanded to include sovereign wealth funds and large, tech-generated family offices that invest directly or co-invest like traditional PE firms. This diversification creates a larger, more resilient pool of capital for deals.

The traditional IPO exit is being replaced by a perpetual secondary market for elite private companies. This new paradigm provides liquidity for investors and employees without the high costs and regulatory burdens of going public. This shift fundamentally alters the venture capital lifecycle, enabling longer private holding periods.

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.

While default risk exists, the more pressing problem for credit investors is a severe supply-demand imbalance. A shortage of new M&A and corporate issuance, combined with massive sideline capital (e.g., $8T in money markets), keeps spreads historically tight and makes finding attractive opportunities the main challenge.

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.

To solve the critical illiquidity problem for individual investors, Goldman Sachs operates a proprietary, quarterly secondary market developed over 20 years. This platform allows its wealth clients to list and sell their alternative investment positions, transacting over a billion dollars in NAV annually and providing a crucial liquidity solution.

Vested works directly with employees because startups find small, one-off secondary transactions burdensome due to legal fees and cap table complexity. However, this dynamic inverts at scale. Once Vested facilitates millions in transactions for a single company's stock, the startup has a strong incentive to partner on a formal liquidity program.

Instead of viewing the flood of private wealth as competition for deals, savvy institutional investors can capitalize on it. Opportunities exist to seed new retail-focused vehicles to gain economics, buy GP stakes in managers entering the wealth channel, or use new evergreen funds as a source of secondary market liquidity.

Though a small portion of the market's NAV, retail investor participation is growing at 50% annually. This new, consistent capital flow is a significant structural change, increasing overall market liquidity and enabling more transactions.

Secondary Market's $200B Dry Powder Barely Matches Its $200B Annual Volume | RiffOn