For years, private equity has been raising money faster than it can spend it, and the pile finally has a number on it.
Global PE firms now hold about $3.7 trillion in dry powder, per Preqin, with PitchBook tracking $4.63 trillion across all private market funds at the end of Q2 2025. That is roughly double the 2019 level, and most of it has been collecting yield while waiting for the right deal.
Why The Pile Got So Big
Higher rates made the math on leveraged buyouts harder.
PitchBook estimates global PE deal count fell about 30% from its 2021 peak, while total deal value dropped roughly 35% over the same window. Sellers held onto old valuations while buyers refused to overpay with pricier debt, and the gap between the two sides kept many deals from closing.
That left fund managers raising cash faster than they could spend it. The average buyout fund now takes about 5.5 years to spend 90% of its committed capital, up from 4.5 years for 2010-2015 vintages.
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Where The Cash Sits
Buyout funds hold the biggest pool of unspent capital at $1.1 trillion, about 30% of the PE total.
Venture capital is next at $580 billion, followed by private debt at $440 billion, growth equity at $420 billion, and real estate at $400 billion. Infrastructure is a smaller bucket at $370 billion, but it has actually grown the fastest, up roughly 120% over five years.
The concentration matters, with McKinsey data showing the top 10 PE managers now control roughly 30% of industry AUM, and the top 20 sitting on more than $600 billion combined.
What That Cash Pile Means
Patient capital cuts both ways.
Funds that raised money before rates spiked are now sitting on dry powder earning yield in short-term Treasuries, which is a real return on cash that did not exist a few years ago. They can also wait for distressed assets at marked-down prices if the cycle turns harder.
The risk is that history shows vintage years following heavy fundraising tend to underperform, with Cambridge Associates data pointing to 2006-2007 vintages trailing 2009-2011 vintages by 400 to 600 basis points in net IRR.
In English: too much money chasing too few deals usually means weaker returns down the line.
What To Watch
The wild card is whether the Fed cuts faster than expected.
A more dovish path could unlock the deal market by lowering the cost of leverage, which would push managers to spend capital before competitors get there first. A slower path keeps the standoff going and lets the pile grow.
Either way, $3.7 trillion is a number markets will be watching this year.
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