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Cash distributions to LPs, the lifeblood of private equity, have slowed as holding periods lengthen significantly (e.g., VC to 14 years, buyouts to 7). This 'gummed up' system is impeding new fundraising and forcing industry consolidation.

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While the dollar value of PE distributions has been stable, the unrealized book value (NAV) has tripled in five years. This has caused the distribution yield—distributions relative to NAV—to plummet to a historic low. This yield metric, not raw dollar exits, is the critical factor constraining LP capital and new fund commitments.

Top companies like Stripe are staying private for decades, extending the time VCs need to return capital to LPs. This shift from a 7-9 year cycle to a 16-20 year one fundamentally changes fund structure and liquidity expectations for both GPs and LPs.

With 27% of US PE funds below their hurdle rate, distributions have slowed dramatically. The value of assets aged over seven years has doubled to over $1 trillion in five years and is projected to hit $2 trillion by 2030, signaling a growing liquidity problem for LPs and funds.

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.

The unprecedented 3-4 year drought in private equity liquidity has fundamentally broken traditional Limited Partner models. LPs, who historically planned on a 4-year cash flow cycle for receiving distributions, are now facing an 8-9 year cycle, creating immense pressure on their allocation and return models.

The private equity industry is heading into a potential fifth straight year of record-low distributions. This has stretched the typical capital return cycle to 7-8 years, a length that standard Limited Partner (LP) financial models were not designed to handle, creating a crisis of both cash flow and confidence.

Howard Marks highlights a critical issue in private equity: a massive overhang of portfolio companies needing to be sold to return capital. Higher interest rates have made exits difficult, creating a liquidity bottleneck that slows distributions to LPs and commitments to new funds.

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 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.

Private Equity's 'Circulatory System' Is Clogged by Lengthening Holding Periods | RiffOn