The private equity secondaries market processed $160 billion in transactions last year, establishing a new baseline for how sponsors generate returns when IPO markets refuse to cooperate. That figure represents more than double the volume from five years ago and marks the first time secondary dealflow exceeded the combined value of U.S. PE-backed IPOs and strategic exits in a calendar year. The shift is structural. Fund sponsors can no longer afford to wait for public markets to reopen or for trade buyers to meet inflated valuations.
Fourteen dealmakers now control the majority of this flow, according to league tables published this week. The list includes expected names—Blackstone Secondary Opportunities, Goldman Sachs Asset Management, Ares Secondary Solutions—but also reflects the rapid institutionalization of what was, until recently, a niche product. These firms are not brokers. They deploy dedicated capital vehicles, some exceeding $20 billion in committed capacity, to buy LP interests and GP-led continuation fund stakes at negotiated discounts. The discounts matter less than the certainty. In a zero-exit environment, a 12–18% haircut on NAV beats holding an overvalued position for another fund cycle.
The secondaries surge solves three problems simultaneously. Limited partners gain liquidity without waiting for fund maturity, a critical relief valve as pension allocators face mounting cash demands and endowments rebalance away from decade-old vintage commitments. General partners extend hold periods on core assets without forcing distributions, preserving management fees and avoiding the political cost of writing down portfolios. And secondary buyers acquire seasoned assets at a moment when primary fundraising has stalled and direct deal competition remains irrational. The arbitrage is time, not price. Buyers pay today's valuation to capture tomorrow's growth in companies already through their J-curve.
Two mechanics are accelerating adoption. GP-led continuation vehicles, where the sponsor transfers portfolio companies into a new fund and offers existing LPs a choice between cashing out or rolling over, accounted for 45% of secondaries volume last year. That is up from 28% three years ago. The other driver is single-asset secondaries, where one prized holding gets spun into a standalone vehicle. Both structures let GPs reset economics, bring in fresh capital at higher valuations than a distressed LP sale would imply, and maintain control of the asset through exit. The LP gets a bid. The GP gets another three to five years. The secondary buyer gets a concentrated exposure without the overhead of a full fund commitment.
Allocators should watch three follow-on developments over the next 18 months. First, whether secondary pricing holds as the bid-ask spread tightens and buyers begin demanding steeper discounts to compensate for extended holding periods. Second, whether regulators scrutinize GP-led transactions for conflicts of interest, particularly when the same sponsor sits on both sides of a continuation vehicle negotiation. Third, whether the secondaries market develops its own distressed cycle as early buyers from 2021–2022, who paid close to NAV, face mark-to-market pressure and need their own exit liquidity.
The $160 billion figure is not a peak. It is a new floor. As long as traditional exits remain blocked and fund life cycles stretch past their contractual limits, secondaries will function as the primary liquidity mechanism for an industry that built itself on the promise of five-year hold periods. The fourteen dealmakers on this year's league table are not intermediaries. They are the new exit market.