The private secondaries market closed 2024 at $162 billion in transaction volume—a 45% year-over-year surge that has pushed the opacity problem past the point where institutional allocators can reasonably ignore it. GIC Pte tapped Evercore this week to advise on a $2 billion private credit divestment, a data point that underscores the divergence: secondary volumes are institutionalizing while pricing transparency remains stuck in 2015.
The growth is structural. LP liquidity demand, GP-led continuation funds, and single-asset secondaries have all matured into repeatable transaction types. What has not matured is the information architecture. Pricing benchmarks remain fragmented across proprietary platforms; bid-ask spreads on illiquid credit assets can widen to 800 basis points in periods of moderate stress; and disclosed transaction multiples often exclude the nuance of deal structure that determines true economics. This is no longer a nichemarket inefficiency—it is a $162 billion blind spot in the portfolios of endowments, sovereign wealth funds, and family offices that measure exposure in nine figures.
The GIC move matters because it signals preference clarity. The sovereign wealth fund has been a disciplined private credit allocator since 2017, building exposure through primary commitments and co-investments. Hiring Evercore to execute a secondary sale rather than holding to maturity or rolling into a continuation vehicle indicates one of two conclusions: either the fund sees deteriorating credit fundamentals that justify accepting secondary market discounts, or it has determined that holding illiquid private credit through an uncertain rate environment carries more opportunity cost than the transaction friction of a secondary exit. Either read is a forward indicator for the broader allocator class.
The opacity compounds at the desk level. Portfolio managers tasked with marking private assets to market are often working from stale NAVs, backward-looking appraisals, and pricing data that reflect 60 to 90 days of lag. In a $162 billion market, that lag is no longer an inconvenience—it is a fiduciary exposure. When a single-asset secondary trades at a 12% discount to the most recent NAV, the question becomes whether that discount reflects distress, liquidity premium, information asymmetry, or all three. Without standardized transaction disclosure, allocators cannot answer with confidence.
Operators and allocators should watch three things. First, whether Evercore structures GIC's private credit exit as a portfolio strip sale or a fund-level transfer, which will signal whether the urgency is asset-specific or strategic. Second, whether other sovereign wealth funds follow with similar secondary mandates in Q1 2025, particularly those with concentrated private credit exposure built between 2020 and 2023. Third, whether the SEC or European regulators begin requiring quarterly transaction-level disclosure for secondaries above a materiality threshold—a $500 million floor would capture the majority of institutional-grade deals and force pricing visibility.
The market is now too large for the information infrastructure it runs on. GIC is not selling into distress—it is selling into a market where price discovery happens in private, terms are bespoke, and the lag between economic reality and reported valuation can exceed a quarter. That is a solvable problem, but only if the allocators who move the most volume decide opacity is no longer acceptable at this scale.