The Top Five Private Market Trends to Watch in 2026

Authored by: Michael Johnson, Chief Commercial Officer
Published on: December 8, 2025

As 2026 approaches, private markets continue to evolve in response to slower exits, tougher fundraising conditions and heightened LP scrutiny. Yet the direction of travel is one of maturity rather than contraction: fund structures are becoming more creative, investor relationships more collaborative and operational rigour a key differentiator.

Five trends are likely to define the year ahead.

1. Continuation funds: designing vehicles that pass LP due diligence

Continuation vehicles have become a fixture in the European private equity landscape. According to PitchBook, by mid-2025 European managers had already raised around €5.3 billion through these structures, or roughly 70 % of the prior year’s total.

What began as an occasional liquidity solution has now evolved into a genuine exit route for both GPs and LPs. They allow managers to hold on to high-conviction assets beyond the life of the original fund, while providing liquidity to investors seeking a realisation.

However, as usage broadens, so does LP scrutiny.

Investors are probing hard on valuation methodology, conflicts of interest, governance and whether the GP’s economics remain fairly aligned with existing LPs. Designing continuation funds that can withstand that due-diligence lens will be crucial. Expect to see vehicles become more specialised and backed by robust independent valuation and fairness processes.

2. Evergreen and hybrid fund structures

The traditional 10-year closed-end model is straining under slower exit conditions and prolonged holding periods. In response, GPs are exploring flexible formats such as evergreen, open-ended, interval and rolling-commitment funds.

These structures allow managers to match liquidity more closely with portfolio maturity and investor needs, reducing the “cliff-edge” effect of forced realisations. For investors, they can also smooth capital deployment and distributions over time. At the same time, GPs using evergreen funds can tap into the significant pool of capital held by retail investors.

In the UK and continental Europe, we can expect greater experimentation with hybrid models that combine permanent capital features with periodic liquidity windows. This is both a product innovation and a cultural shift: the emphasis is moving from fund vintage to platform longevity. Managers who can demonstrate disciplined valuation and redemption governance will be best placed to capture institutional appetite for more continuous exposure to private markets.

3. Operational value generation: efficiency as alpha

As leverage driven returns fade, operational excellence is becoming the new alpha. In 2026, success will depend more on execution – digital transformation, pricing and cost analytics and resilient supply chains.

Funds are already expanding their operating partner benches and investing in data infrastructure and platforms that provide real-time portfolio insight. AI-driven monitoring, predictive analytics and scenario modelling are helping managers pre-empt performance issues rather than react to them.

GPs who can institutionalise this capability, embedding data, governance and continuous improvement, will differentiate themselves even in subdued exit markets. In 2026, I expect to see more portfolio level operating playbooks, data led interventions and KPI linked incentive systems. The best performing managers will act more like industrial strategists than financial engineers.

4. GP–LP partnerships: the LP that becomes a GP

The relationship between capital provider and manager is becoming more symbiotic. Many LPs now want deeper alignment, through co-investments, GP-stakes funds, or even direct equity participation in management companies.

This trend blurs the traditional distinction between LP and GP. Sovereign funds, pension plans and large family offices are taking minority stakes in managers to share long-term upside and secure preferential access to deals. For GPs, selling a small slice of the management company can provide growth capital, succession flexibility and stronger alignment with cornerstone investors.

As these partnerships proliferate, governance standards will tighten. Transparent reporting, clear conflict-management protocols and balanced economics will be essential to maintain trust as LPs become true strategic partners rather than passive allocators.

5. Exit creativity: structuring for patience

With IPO windows sporadic and trade buyers cautious, exits in 2026 will demand imagination. GPs are increasingly turning to carve-outs, spin-outs, minority recapitalisations and structured earn-outs to unlock liquidity.

Research from EY suggests many managers are prepared to accept 5 -10 % valuation discounts to complete transactions, an acknowledgment that liquidity has a price. Secondary markets, particularly for private credit and real assets, are poised for expansion as investors seek partial liquidity without full divestment.

Cross-border dealmaking will remain complex, requiring careful navigation of tax and regulatory differences. Managers with sophisticated structuring capabilities – and patience – will be rewarded. “How to exit in tight markets” will remain one of the defining strategic questions for private equity in 2026.

2026 private markets outlook: sophistication, flexibility and trust

The common thread across all five trends is sophistication. Continuation funds and evergreen models require intricate governance, operational alpha demands data mastery, GP-LP partnerships and creative exits rely on transparency and alignment.

Private markets are maturing into an ecosystem where structure, process and trust matter as much as raw performance. For general partners, that means building operational foundations capable of supporting flexibility and scrutiny alike. For limited partners, it means engaging earlier and deeper to understand how managers intend to deliver liquidity, longevity and accountability.

2026 will be about refinement, remembered as the year private markets became more measured, disciplined and inventive than ever before.

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