
How private markets are navigating new risk landscapes
28 November 2025
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28 November 2025INSIGHTS
How private markets are navigating new risk landscapes
By Validus - 4 December 2025
Summary
Private markets have navigated one of the most challenging periods in recent history. Over the past two years, firms have adjusted to slower fundraising, muted deal activity, and persistent macro volatility. In response, managers have broadened their investor base across geographies and investor types, explored retail and private wealth channels, and adopted more flexible fund structures to meet rising liquidity demands. At the same time, asset classes like credit and secondaries have surged, helping sustain deal flow in an otherwise constrained environment.
Overlaying these market dynamics is a shifting macroeconomic backdrop, shaped by interest rate volatility, inflation trends, geopolitical tensions, and uncertainty around US policy outcomes. These forces are reshaping how managers evaluate interest rate risk, manage FX exposures, and plan for liquidity across fund structures.
This report, produced by Private Equity Wire in partnership with Validus Risk Management, examines how current macro conditions are influencing private markets risk. It covers interest rate and FX risks, the rise of multi-currency fund structures, evolving liquidity management solutions, and how technology is transforming risk operations. The analysis combines insights from senior Validus experts, a case perspective from Oaktree Capital Management, and data from 120+ fund managers surveyed in Private Equity Wire’s Q3 GP study.
Key Highlights
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Slower fundraising and deal activity are reshaping private markets.
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Managers are diversifying across regions and investor types.
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Multi-currency fund structures are becoming the norm.
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FX exposure and operational burden are rising.
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Interest rate volatility affects both valuations and financing.
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Private credit expansion raises hedging complexity.
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Liquidity pressures persist due to limited exits.
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Fund financing supports liquidity and hedging needs.
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New fund structures demand stronger governance.
