So... Is Private Equity Collapsing Yet?

Video thumbnail: So... Is Private Equity Collapsing Yet?
Jul 13, 202620m 17s video lengthHow Money Works

The Signal

Private equity (PE) headline performance in 2025 masked significant structural strain, characterized by a concentration of exits in a few mega-deals rather than broad market health. While firms successfully offloaded assets during a favorable window, the industry faces an ongoing crisis of liquidity and valuation, particularly within levered SaaS portfolios and private credit where signs of systemic stress are now emerging.

The Case

Headline vs. Reality - PE exit value hit $717B in 2025—a 47% increase—yet total deal counts fell by 6%, with only 13 massive sales accounting for nearly one-third of that volume.

  • Realized distributions to investors remained stagnant at 14% of net asset value throughout 2025, the lowest level seen since the 2008–2009 financial crisis.6:22
  • A record $226B in secondary transactions and $115B in continuation vehicles suggests that much of the "exit" activity is now circular, consisting of firms selling assets to funds they already manage to extend holding periods.7:26

The SaaS and Credit Crunch - The Medallia deal—a software company acquired by Thoma Bravo—serves as a primary case study where excessive debt, rising interest rates, and software valuation repricing forced the sponsor to walk away and realize a $5B loss.

  • Aggregate SaaS market capitalization collapsed by roughly $1 trillion in Q1 2026, with median revenue multiples falling from 6.2x to 3.3x, leaving 80% of PE buyers to identify AI-driven commoditization as their top valuation risk.18:02
  • Private credit is showing visible distress as five of the six major funds gated investor withdrawals in early 2026, while a junior collateralized loan obligation (CLO) tranche in Europe defaulted for the first time in nearly two decades.16:06

The 1 Minute Signal Take

Investors should view the recent PE exit boom as a temporary realization window rather than evidence of fundamental stability. The industry is effectively shifting from an LBO-centric model toward a concentrated "walled garden" for institutional capital, while mounting liquidity pressures in private credit and software portfolios suggest the current model of fee-driven leverage is reaching a critical inflection point.

Pro Analysis

Why It Matters

Private equity has become the financial backbone of the modern economy, yet it operates in a black box. Understanding its current instability is vital because the industry has effectively become a 'shadow' public market. If private equity continues to recycle capital through continuation vehicles rather than returning it, we are witnessing a permanent capital lock-up that could distort broader market valuations.

Strategic Implications

The industry is undergoing a Darwinian transition. Classic 'roll-up' LBOs are being cannibalized by the combination of high interest rates and falling software multiples. The winners of this cycle are likely to be massive institutional asset managers who pivot toward infrastructure and data assets, while mid-market sponsors reliant on cheap debt will likely fail.

Evidence & Hype Audit

The content relies heavily on professional-grade data points—such as exit values and CLO default reports—but it laces them with a sensationalist narrative. While the evidence for structural strain is strong, the 'collapse' framing is speculative. The narrator uses rhetorical analogies that sound compelling but may overstate the actual systemic risk.

Counterarguments

Critics would argue that the 2025 window provided vital liquidity management that allowed firms to rebalance their portfolios without triggering a systemic fire sale. In this view, the increase in continuation vehicles is not 'extend and pretend,' but rather a sophisticated way for institutional LPs to keep their exposure to high-quality assets while gaining liquidity in a complex environment.

Who Should Care

  • Institutional Allocators (LPs): Re-evaluate the true risk of 'locked' capital in private funds.
  • Private Debt Analysts: Watch for second-order defaults in senior tranches following the current junior tranche failures.
  • Founders: Recognize that selling into a PE ‘going-private’ deal now carries significantly higher execution risk than in 2021.

What To Do Next

  • Conduct a 'stress test' on software-focused portfolios by applying a 30% discount to current marks.
  • Prioritize liquidity and short-duration cash equivalents over long-locked private fund commitments.
  • Audit existing private credit exposure for exposure to non-listed BDCs currently showing net outflows.
  • Prepare for a longer deleveraging cycle that will likely see more sponsor handouts of distressed assets.
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