Key takeaways
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- Liquidity remains constrained: Distributions were 14% of NAV in 2025, the second-lowest level since the depths of the 2008-era slump.
- Exit overhang is large: The industry is sitting on $3.8T of unsold assets, keeping cash returns to LPs weak for a fourth straight year.
- Fundraising is deteriorating: Capital raised fell 16% in 2025 to $395B, marking four consecutive annual declines.
- Return hurdles are rising: LPs want net IRRs >20%, and Bain argues value creation needs to accelerate—“12% annual EBITDA growth is the new 5%” given rates and multiples.
What Happened?
Bain reports private equity returned fewer profits to investors for the fourth straight year as higher rates and tougher exits kept distributions depressed. LP cash returns (distributions) stayed at 14% of NAV last year, near multi-cycle lows, while PE firms held an estimated $3.8T of unsold assets.
Deal value rose 44% to $904B in 2025, helped by large transactions (including a major take-private), but total deal count fell 6% to 3,018, and the rebound didn’t meaningfully clear the backlog. Bain also cites tariff-driven uncertainty as a factor that interrupted momentum in deal activity.
Why It Matters?
This is primarily a liquidity and denominator-effect problem for institutional allocators. When distributions stay low, LPs have less cash to recycle into new funds, which pressures fundraising and shifts negotiating power toward investors (fees, terms, pacing, and selection). The longer assets are held, the more difficult it becomes to defend headline IRRs—because time becomes the enemy of performance unless operating improvement is meaningfully higher.
Bain’s “12 is the new 5” framing highlights a structural reset: with higher borrowing costs and less multiple expansion to rely on, PE returns must increasingly come from operational value creation, not financial engineering. That raises execution risk and amplifies dispersion between top-tier managers and the rest—especially for portfolio companies that aren’t “gem” assets and are harder to exit.
What’s Next?
Expect a tougher allocation environment where LPs concentrate commitments in strategies and managers that can demonstrate credible exit paths and underwritten operating plans before acquisition. Watch for continued growth in secondaries and infrastructure-focused vehicles as investors seek liquidity management and different cash-flow profiles.
Key indicators to track are the pace of distribution recovery, changes in average hold periods (now ~7 years vs ~5–6 in 2021), and whether improving exit markets actually translate into cash back to LPs rather than just more “paper” valuation support.














