Aleta released a private-markets forecasting module for its family office consolidation platform this week. No revenue guidance. No client count. The company positions the tool as a cashflow-modeling layer atop its existing consolidated wealth reporting stack — specifically for illiquid positions that lack daily NAVs. The product ships immediately to current customers.
The module builds on Aleta's core offering: aggregated reporting across public equities, fixed income, alternatives, and direct holdings. Family offices already using the platform can now model future distributions, capital calls, and exit scenarios for private equity, venture funds, real estate partnerships, and direct investments. The tool ingests commitment schedules, manager forecasts, and portfolio company metrics — then surfaces consolidated cashflow projections alongside liquid holdings. Aleta did not disclose whether the module uses third-party data vendors or relies entirely on user-uploaded documents.
The timing matters. Single family offices added $1.2 trillion in private-market allocations between 2020 and 2024, according to UBS and Campden Research. That expansion created a reporting problem: GP updates arrive quarterly, valuations lag by 60 to 90 days, and capital calls arrive with two weeks' notice. Offices managing $500 million or more now hold 30% to 45% of assets in illiquid strategies — but most consolidation software treats those positions as static line items. Liquidity mismatches have forced at least a dozen offices to sell secondaries at discounts or borrow against public portfolios when capital calls clustered. The forecasting layer Aleta shipped addresses that blind spot by surfacing expected outflows and inflows on a rolling 12-to-24-month horizon.
Two follow-on moves worth tracking. First, whether Aleta's module integrates with Ledgex, eFront, or Carta — the three dominant private-capital data layers already embedded in institutional allocator workflows. If it does not, the tool remains siloed; if it does, the product becomes stickier and harder to replace. Second, whether competitor platforms — Addepar, Masttro, Atribus — ship similar modules in the next six months. Purpose-built family office software is still a $400 million annual revenue category, and product parity arrives fast when a tier-one player moves. Aleta's launch likely accelerates that cycle.
The company did not announce pricing changes or reveal whether the forecasting module requires an additional license fee. That silence suggests either a land-and-expand bundling strategy or a test phase before broader rollout. Either way, the product exists because offices demanded it — and because private-market exposure now exceeds the reporting tolerance of static dashboards.