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Private equity firms are no longer acquiring legacy B2B SaaS companies, even those with strong revenue ($50M-$200M+). Without a compelling AI-driven growth story, this once-reliable exit path for founders and VCs has effectively closed, leaving many companies unaware of their limited options.

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Private equity firms, which heavily invested in software companies for their stable earnings, are now in a bind. The AI threat devalues these assets and complicates exits, forcing them away from traditional IPOs and toward more complex M&A strategies.

The current fundraising environment is the most binary in recent memory. Startups with the "right" narrative—AI-native, elite incubator pedigree, explosive growth—get funded easily. Companies with solid but non-hype metrics, like classic SaaS growers, are finding it nearly impossible to raise capital. The middle market has vanished.

The "SaaSpocalypse" isn't about current revenues but a collapse in investor confidence. AI introduces profound uncertainty about future cash flows, causing the market to heavily discount what was once seen as bond-like predictability. SaaS firms must now actively prove they are beneficiaries of AI to regain their premium valuations.

A significant shift has occurred: private equity firms are no longer actively pursuing acquisitions of solid SaaS companies that fall short of IPO scale. This disappearance of a reliable exit path forces VCs and founders to find new strategies for liquidity and growth.

Investor Jason Lemkin claims that private equity firms and strategic acquirers are no longer interested in buying B2B SaaS companies in the $50M to $800M ARR range that lack a strong AI narrative. Even if profitable, these companies are seen as existentially threatened, effectively closing a once-reliable exit path for founders and investors.

For over a decade, SaaS products remained relatively unchanged, allowing PE firms to acquire them and profit from high NRR. AI destroys this model. The rate of product change is now unprecedented, meaning products can't be static, introducing a technology risk that PE models are not built for.

For years, founders of profitable but slow-growing SaaS companies could rely on a private equity acquisition as a viable exit. That safety net is gone. PE firms are now just as wary of AI disruption and growth decay as VCs, leaving many 'pretty good' SaaS companies with no buyers.

Recent acquisitions of slow-growth public SaaS companies are not just value grabs but turnaround plays. Acquirers believe these companies' distribution can be revitalized by injecting AI-native products, creating a path back to high growth and higher multiples.

Established SaaS companies with strong, but not explosive, growth will struggle to raise new venture capital. Their path forward involves running a capital-efficient business while aggressively integrating AI to create new tailwinds, or else face a long, slow grind to a modest exit without further investment.

High SaaS revenue multiples make buyouts too expensive for management teams. This contrasts with traditional businesses valued on lower EBITDA multiples, where buyouts are more common. The exception is for stable, low-growth SaaS companies where a deal might be structured with seller financing.

Private Equity Has Abandoned Non-AI B2B SaaS Companies, Killing a Key Exit Path | RiffOn