The data is clear. Private equity is no longer an alternative option. It is the priority.
Recent institutional surveys rank private equity as the number one allocation target for 2026. Natixis reports that 39% of institutions are actively increasing their PE exposure, while McKinsey confirms that 30% of limited partners plan to boost their allocations over the next 12 months.
This global sentiment is mirrored locally. In Australia, we saw deal values surge 153% in the first half of 2025, reaching A$7.9 billion. Superannuation funds now hold over 16% of their portfolios in private markets.
The capital is moving. But the more important narrative is how it is moving.
The asset class that was once the exclusive domain of institutional giants is opening its doors. We are witnessing a convergence of sophisticated capital, technology, and demographic shifts that are fundamentally reshaping private equity.
Here are the four shifts driving this evolution.
1. The Democratisation of Access
The barriers to entry are lowering. Major PE firms are recognising the untapped liquidity in the wholesale and HNW market. We are seeing a rise in evergreen funds, lower minimums, and structured access to club deals.
Even BlackRock is betting on tokenisation to slice private assets into accessible pieces. This allows sophisticated investors to build portfolios with the same rigour as major institutions.
2. The Succession Supercycle
In Australia alone, over 350,000 business owners must transition ownership or close their doors in the coming decade. This is a demographic wave that cannot be stopped.
It creates a generational opportunity in mid-market buyouts. We are seeing new models emerge to capture this deal flow, including Entrepreneurship Through Acquisition (ETA), forever funds, and continuation vehicles.
3. The Business of Sport
Sports ownership has transitioned from a vanity play to a sophisticated asset class. The global signal was the NBA’s $76B media deal.
In Australia, the trend is accelerating. Silver Lake backed the A-League. Wollemi Capital acquired a stake in the WNBL. Prime Financial Group’s alternative arm, Altor Capital, made strategic moves in 2025 by acquiring the reigning NBL champions, Tasmania JackJumpers.
This is a play on media rights, loyal ecosystems, and recession-resistant yield.
4. AI as the Value Creator
The old playbook of financial engineering is losing effectiveness. In a higher-rate environment, returns must come from genuine operational improvement.
The best operators are deploying AI across portfolio companies to automate processes and unlock growth. This is where the new alpha is being generated.
Get the Insider Briefing at Emergence 2026
Understanding these shifts is the difference between passive investing and strategic allocation.
That is why we have dedicated a major panel session to Private Equity Investment Trends at Emergence 2026.
We are bringing together the fund managers, family offices, and dealmakers who are orchestrating this ecosystem.
Emergence 2026: Convergence & Abundance February 19-20 | Four Seasons Hotel, Sydney
You will gain access to:
- 60+ private and small-cap investment opportunities.
- Insights from 30+ keynote speakers and panellists.
- A network of 1,000+ investors and dealmakers.
The institutions are moving. The deal flow is accelerating. This is your opportunity to be in the room where the opportunities are being discussed.
