Additionally, we’ve looked back at 50 years of IPOs in the US and found that when issuance volumes have fallen well below the mean, they have typically done so for one to three years before rising again. And 2024 was the third year in this latest period of depressed IPO activity. More anecdotally, we’re also seeing a growing number of reports in the press about companies planning an IPO, which adds to our confidence.
The wildcard in all of this is, obviously, the current US administration’s policy choices with respect to tariffs. The same policy decisions that have weighed on the US public market year to date will likely weigh on new issuance volumes. This runs the risk of delaying IPO exits even further, but, in our opinion, it’s not a matter of if they come back but when.
Adam: Another issue that’s been on the minds of private equity investors is the rise in interest rates. Does this shift change the way private equity investors should think about the opportunity set and prospective returns?
Matt: I think it does for strategies that tend to employ more leverage and therefore have more direct exposure to interest rates — buyout funds, for example. For strategies that lean heavily on leverage, I would expect returns to look quite different going forward. On the other side of the strategy spectrum, you have areas like venture capital and late-stage growth that are focused on tapping into rapid growth in businesses benefitting from technology-led disruption and are less likely to rely on leverage. Put another way, if you're investing in a company that's growing 50% or 100% a year, then it probably matters less to the fundamental returns of the strategy whether interest rates are at 3% or 4% or 5%. (Read more on this topic in our recent article, “No more free lunch: Impact of higher interest rates on private equity.”)
Adam: In your research, you’ve highlighted the tendency for private companies to stay private longer and the impact that has had on the late-stage venture capital space. Can you talk about that trend and how it has shaped the opportunity set?
Matt: More than a decade ago, we observed that companies were staying private longer for a variety of reasons, from the increased regulatory burden on public companies to evidence of the strong post-IPO performance of more mature businesses. As companies stay private longer, they are more likely to go through their hyper-growth phase while they are still in the private market, rather than when they’ve entered the public small-cap space, and they will tend to be larger when they do IPO. We can see the effect of this trend in the declining number of small-cap companies with a market cap below $1 billion (Figure 3).
Monthly Market Review — February 2025
Continue readingBy
Brett Hinds
Jameson Dunn