Ultra-high-net-worth families representing more than $150 billion in aggregate wealth financed $27 billion in take-private transactions during 2024, reversing three years of dormant buyout activity. The capital came through direct co-investment vehicles and structured preferred equity, not traditional LP commitments, according to deal-level tracking.
The resurgence marks a structural shift in how large buyouts get financed. Where 2021-2023 relied on syndicated debt and club deals among institutional sponsors, 2024's largest delistings required patient equity from families willing to accept 8-12 year hold periods and subordinated return waterfalls. Fourteen of the year's twenty-three transactions above $1 billion included family-office capital in the structure, compared to two such deals in all of 2023. The families entered at acquisition close, not through secondaries, taking board observation rights and veto provisions on exit timing.
This matters because public markets stopped rewarding operational complexity. Listed companies trading below 12x EBITDA despite 20%+ ROIC became systematically cheaper to own private, where quarterly earnings volatility doesn't trigger algorithmic selling. The families writing these checks operate industrial portfolios—logistics networks, regulated infrastructure, healthcare systems—and recognize the arbitrage between public impatience and private compounding. They're also filling a void left by pension funds, which remain underweight private equity after 2022-2023 portfolio markdowns and can't move quickly on proprietary deal flow.
The mechanics explain why this capital moved now. Debt financing for buyouts remains expensive—leveraged loan spreads held near 475 basis points over SOFR through year-end—but family offices don't rely on leverage multiples to generate returns. They're structuring deals at 3.5-4.5x debt-to-EBITDA, half the ratios common in 2021, and writing equity checks that institutional LPs simply won't. That creates a durable advantage in competitive processes, where speed and certainty matter more than price. Worth noting: nine of the fourteen family-backed deals closed within 90 days of announcement, compared to a 140-day median for sponsor-only buyouts.
Operators should track refinancing activity among these 2024 take-privates through mid-2025. The families structured floating-rate preferred equity expecting SOFR cuts that haven't fully materialized, and several deals carry step-up provisions if the company remains private past 24 months. Any capital structure amendments will signal whether the arbitrage holds or whether these assets return to public markets sooner than planned. Separately, watch for family offices forming permanent capital vehicles to institutionalize this strategy—three groups are reportedly in registration for evergreen funds that would deploy against similar opportunities without fund-life constraints.
The real tell: these families aren't selling the assets they take private. They're consolidating them into holding companies and refinancing at the HoldCo level, turning listed equity stakes into permanent books of operating businesses.