The secondary private equity and real estate markets closed $132 billion in transactions during 2024, according to PJT Park Hill, marking the fourth consecutive year above $100 billion and pushing total market AUM past $200 billion. Bid-ask spreads narrowed to their tightest levels since 2021, averaging 6.2 percentage points in Q4 compared to 11.8 points eighteen months prior.
The compression reflects a shift in seller motivation. Distressed liquidity events — the market's original purpose — now represent less than 40% of volume, down from 68% in 2020. Portfolio rebalancing, single-asset strip sales, and GP-led continuation vehicles accounted for $79 billion of activity last year. Three factors converged: longer hold periods in primary funds (median 7.4 years, up from 5.1 years in 2015), regulatory pressure on insurance allocators to trim illiquid exposure, and improved pricing infrastructure through platforms like Setter Capital and StepStone's secondary analytics tools.
Family offices treating secondaries as a distinct sleeve — not emergency liquidity — commit 18-24 months earlier in their deployment cycles than they did three years ago. The logic: acquiring 3-5 year seasoned positions in vintage primary funds offers J-curve mitigation and earlier distributions. Pricing discipline returned. Transactions in Q4 cleared at 88-92% of NAV for diversified PE portfolios, compared to the 82-86% range that prevailed through mid-2023. Real estate secondaries lagged at 79-84%, reflecting unresolved office exposure and slower mark-to-market adjustments by GPs.
The data infrastructure problem is structural. Secondaries require parsing 40-60 underlying fund agreements per portfolio transaction, with inconsistent reporting cadences across GPs. Buyers spend 120-180 days on due diligence for complex deals, twice the timeline of a primary commitment. Accelex and similar document intelligence vendors report 220% year-over-year growth in secondaries-related contract analytics, but the tooling remains fragmented. Allocators building dedicated secondaries programs hire teams of 4-6 specialists just to normalize data feeds. Without standardization, pricing efficiency hits a ceiling.
Market participants should track three follow-on developments through mid-2025. First, GP-led continuation vehicle volume — $47 billion in 2024 — faces LP pushback as governance concerns mount over selective asset rollovers. Second, insurance allocators under NAIC scrutiny will liquidate an estimated $15-22 billion in PE/RE exposure, creating episodic pricing pressure. Third, the $38 billion raised by dedicated secondaries funds in 2024 needs deployment, setting up a buyer's market if primary distribution rates stay elevated.
The bid-ask spread in Q1 2025 will determine whether 90% of NAV becomes the new clearing threshold for quality portfolios. If it does, secondaries shift from tactical tool to core infrastructure, and the $200 billion market becomes $300 billion by 2027.