The private equity industry is sitting on a powder keg. For years, fund managers have exploited a low-interest-rate environment to inflate portfolio company valuations through leverage and aggressive multiples. But as central banks tighten monetary policy, the cracks are becoming visible. The concern no one is raising is that the entire asset class is facing a structural repricing, with estimates suggesting as much as $1 trillion in unrealized losses could be realized in the coming quarters.
Take the case of a mid-market buyout fund that acquired a healthcare services firm in 2021 at 12x EBITDA, using 60% debt. Today, with interest rates up 400 basis points, that same company’s debt service costs have doubled, compressing margins. Yet the fund still carries the investment at cost, relying on outdated valuations from a period when cheap money was abundant. This is not an isolated incident. According to data from PitchBook, the median holding period for portfolio companies has stretched to over six years, the longest since 2008. Managers are delaying exits, hoping for a recovery that may never come.
But the problem runs deeper than just higher interest rates. The secondary market for private equity stakes is flashing warning signs. Coller Capital’s latest Global Private Equity Barometer shows that 45% of limited partners expect their portfolio valuations to decline by more than 10% over the next year. The gap between what buyers are willing to pay and what sellers want is widening. In the first half of 2023, global buyout deal value fell 58% year-on-year, according to Bain & Company. That is not a liquidity crunch. It is a valuation impasse.
Then there is the hidden cost of leverage. The Bank of England recently warned that private equity-backed companies account for 40% of all leveraged loans in the UK. As these loans reset at higher rates, covenant breaches will multiply. When a portfolio company violates a debt covenant, the private equity sponsor often has to inject fresh equity to avoid default. That dilutes returns for limited partners. The Pension Protection Fund, a major investor in private equity, has already flagged concerns about the transparency of valuation methodologies used by fund managers.
Yet the industry remains defiant. Private equity executives argue that long-term value creation through operational improvements will smooth out cyclical dips. But this ignores a critical structural failure: the compensation model. General partners earn management fees on the size of assets under management, not on realized returns. There is a perverse incentive to keep assets on the books at inflated prices. The Financial Conduct Authority is now scrutinizing how private equity firms mark their portfolios, but regulatory action has been tepid.
Meanwhile, the IPO window remains shuttered. In 2022, private equity-backed IPOs fell to their lowest level since 2009. Companies that were once destined for public markets are now being held indefinitely. This creates a backlog of unrealized investments that must eventually be sold into a market with fewer buyers. When the dam breaks, the price correction will be sudden.
Consider the case of a large-cap buyout of a retail chain in 2019. The deal was valued at 10x EBITDA, with a plan to improve margins through store closures and e-commerce investment. Today, that retailer faces a consumer spending slowdown and rising wage costs. The fund has already written down the investment by 20%, but insiders suggest the true value is 40% below acquisition cost. That gap between mark-to-model and mark-to-market represents the valuation cliff.
Limited partners are starting to push back. The California Public Employees’ Retirement System recently announced it would reduce its private equity allocation by 20% over the next two years. Others are demanding more frequent and transparent valuations. But the damage is done. The $1 trillion correction is not a prediction. It is an accounting reality waiting to be acknowledged.
As one partner at a family office put it: “Some funds are still showing marks from 2021. That’s not conservative, it’s fraudulent.”








