Amid current market uncertainties, "resilience" has become a focal point for investors, according to Nils Rode, Chief Investment Officer of Private Markets at Schroders Capital. Schroders’ June 2025 Global Investor Study revealed that "portfolio resilience" ranked as investors’ top priority for the remainder of 2025 and 2026, far surpassing other considerations. While surface-level market conditions appear stable—with strong public equity performance and moderate bond yields—underlying complexities persist. Stubborn inflation, mounting fiscal pressures, and geopolitical flashpoints continue testing global stability. Though AI-driven technological advancements are transformative, they risk reigniting valuation imbalances. This environment challenges investors to look beyond short-term momentum and focus instead on sustainable returns and bottom-up value creation.
Cyclical and structural factors are converging to create opportunities, positioning private markets as a critical arena. Private equity is undergoing recalibration, with fundraising and deal activity still below pre-2022 levels, exit channels narrowing, and holding periods extending. Tighter financing conditions and macroeconomic volatility are reshaping the landscape—not signaling weakness but restoring balance and discipline. Reduced competition, cautious capital deployment, and wider pricing disparities now pave the way for stronger future returns.
Current conditions favor strategies leveraging three complementary resilience drivers: local champions, transformative growth, and multipolar innovation. Regionally rooted firms benefit from stable demand, shorter supply chains, and insulation from trade friction, bolstering portfolios against geopolitical shocks. Companies driving intrinsic value through operational improvements, innovation, or complex problem-solving gain an edge as financial engineering recedes and hands-on ownership models rise. Meanwhile, disruptive innovation now spans multiple hubs—from the U.S. and Europe to China, India, and broader APAC—reducing reliance on any single market.
These themes converge in three private market segments with differentiated potential: 1. **Mid-market buyouts** (deals under $1B EV) serve as private equity’s resilience engine, offering entry valuations 40-50% lower than large buyouts or public small-caps, with lower leverage dependence and greater operational flexibility. 2. **Early-stage venture capital** taps expanding innovation frontiers. Beyond AI’s late-stage valuation concerns, biotech, climate tech, fintech, and deep tech present diversified opportunities—recent biotech cooling now opens contrarian plays. 3. **Yield-generating assets** are gaining demand as insurers and income-focused investors shift allocations post-low-rate era. Narrowing risk premiums, especially in syndicated loans, enhance appeal in less efficient markets like shorter-duration or regulated bank/insurer segments.
Commercial real estate shows stabilization signs after years of adjustment. U.S. property values flatlined YoY, with industrial and select retail sectors rebounding. As policy rates ease, transaction activity and financing needs recover—yet banks’ real estate exposure strains create gaps for private lenders. Infrastructure debt remains a stable, defensive yield anchor, while insurance-linked securities (ILS) offer low-correlation returns amid limited recent losses.
Energy transition infrastructure stands out as a long-term thematic, combining inflation linkage, premium growth, and diversification benefits. Renewables now dominate cost-efficient power generation, with emerging technologies (hydrogen, heat pumps, battery storage, EV charging) critical for deep decarbonization. Data centers and digital infrastructure further amplify clean energy demand. Europe and Asia lead investment opportunities, with policy tailwinds—Europe’s €600B renewable infrastructure transactions (nearly half the regional total) could double to €1.3T by early 2030s, cementing energy transition as the dominant asset class.