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Sunday, Dec 07, 2025

Private Equity’s Fundraising Surge Triggers Concern of European Market Shake-Out

Over €110 billion in new fund targets heighten pressure on underperforming firms in a saturated landscape
Europe’s private equity industry is on edge as major firms race to raise unprecedented sums, sparking fears of a wide-scale shake-out that will discriminate between top performers and weaker players.

The six largest European private equity groups are aiming to raise more than €110 billion through 2026—a dramatic leap from around €34 billion expected in 2025.

This rapid influx of capital comes amid structural tensions: limited partners are growing more selective, exit pathways remain clogged, and many funds face pressure to deploy capital even in challenging deal conditions.

In effect, market watchers warn of a bifurcation in the sector: funds with strong track records and access to top deal flow may thrive, while lesser players could struggle to compete or even survive.

Prominent names such as Hg, Ardian, Permira, Oakley, PAI and Nordic Capital are leading the fundraising charge.

Some like Advent and Nordic Capital have already extended their timetables into next year in a bid to secure sufficient commitments.

The stakes are high: institutional investors increasingly demand premium returns and lower risk exposure, raising the bar for emerging or mid-tier funds.

Underpinning these dynamics is a more challenging macro environment.

Delayed IPOs and weak public markets limit exit options, while elevated borrowing costs compress leverage in new deals.

In response, many firms are relying on continuation funds and secondary markets to recycle capital and extract liquidity from mature portfolios.

Within deal pipelines, the emphasis is shifting toward operational improvements, sector specialization, and cross-industry platform strategies.

Sources in the sector say that with capital flooding in, limited partners are pressing managers harder than ever to justify fees and performance.

Some funds are resetting fundraising targets downward or returning to earlier vintages to revalidate their strategies.

Others may consolidate or tie up through mergers or strategic partnerships to maintain scale and relevance.

While Europe’s private equity outlook retains areas of optimism—especially in technology, healthcare, and infrastructure—many in the industry anticipate a cull of weaker firms during the next twelve to eighteen months.

The impending reshuffle could reset industry norms around fund size, cost discipline, and return expectations, leaving only those best able to adapt and deliver value intact.

The sector now stands at a critical inflection point where ambition must meet execution, and scale must be matched by resilience and foresight.
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