Value Creation Has Migrated
										
		
		
							The data reinforces this trend: in 2000, companies typically went public after six years. Today, that timeline has stretched to 14 years.
										
					
						Companies are staying private longer because private capital markets now offer the scale, expertise, and patient capital that once required a public listing. This represents a complete reversal from decades ago, and it means a larger portion of corporate value creation — the growth that investors seek — now happens in private markets before companies ever reach public markets. For example, the top five private companies are valued at an average of more than $250B — 25x larger than where the current top 5 public companies IPO’ed.					
	
				 
				
				
		 
		
	 
	
	
		
		
			
The Performance Premium: Why Private Equity Has Historically Outperformed
										
		
		
							Over the past 20 years, private equity has generated average annual returns of approximately 13% net of fees, compared to 8% for public equities. 
										
					
						This 5% outperformance is not a short-term anomaly; it has remained consistent across market cycles. Private equity managers drive innovation, operational excellence and strategic vision through long-term, patient capital. This approach enables management teams to execute transformative operational enhancements and strategic pivots without the pressure of public market swings and quarterly earnings calls.
Private equity identifies opportunities through an information advantage that begins long before any investment is made. Through months of comprehensive due diligence and proprietary relationships, top firms develop insights that public market investors simply cannot.
Unlike public markets where information is broadly distributed, privates operate on an invite-only basis, where select investors with proven reputations and deep industry relationships gain access to opportunities.					
	
				 
				
				
		 
		
	 
	
	
		
		
			
The Private Equity Advantage: Active Ownership
										
		
		
							The heart of private equity’s value proposition lies in its approach to active ownership and business building.
										
					
						Leading private equity firms begin by identifying long-term thematic trends — from digitization and AI to energy transition and healthcare innovation — then finding the best-positioned companies within those themes to win. This thematic expertise, combined with deep sector knowledge, enables firms to develop clear value creation initiatives before committing any capital. [ 12 ]
As active owners, private equity firms partner with management teams to set strategic visions and make disciplined capital allocation decisions. In today’s higher interest rate environment, the ability to prioritize return on investment — whether expanding into new markets, developing new products or pursuing strategic acquisitions — has become even more critical. Private equity brings decades of pattern recognition to these decisions.
This partnership approach to building businesses focuses on several key value creation levers:
Strategic Leadership & Governance. Private equity firms maintain extensive networks of operating partners and executives who can rapidly strengthen portfolio companies as leaders, board members or advisors. They establish best-in-class governance structures that enable swift decision-making and efficient capital allocation, driving strong performance over time.
Digital & Operational Excellence. Private equity brings specialized expertise to modernize operations through technology upgrades, such as AI, data science and process optimization. This systematic transformation, informed by cross-portfolio insights, drives efficiency gains that companies struggle to achieve independently.
Accelerated Growth. Whether through geographical expansion, new product development, or strategic M&A, private equity firms excel at identifying and executing growth initiatives. Their global networks and scale enable portfolio companies to enter new markets faster and consolidate fragmented industries more effectively than standalone companies.
Scale Advantages. Leading firms leverage their portfolios’ collective scales to negotiate enterprise contracts, access top-tier talent and share best practices. These resources, from procurement savings to technology platforms, provide immediate impact while building long-term capabilities.
The collective results of private equity transformation are clear. Studies have shown that a majority of private equity performance comes from earnings growth rather than multiple expansion. [ 13 ] This long-term focus is the cornerstone of private equity, helping explain why many companies choose to stay private for longer, with more value creation underway and available to private market investors.					
	
				 
				
				
		 
		
	 
	
    
         
                                            
                            Diversification does not ensure a profit or protect against losses.  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            Cambridge Associates, December 2023, Global PE-owned companies compared to the MSCI ACWI from 2008-2023.  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            Capital IQ, June 2024. Represents the share of companies based on the total number of public and private companies in North America, Europe, and Asia that have reported 2024, 2023, or 2022 fiscal year revenues greater than $250 million per Capital IQ’s company database.  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            Bloomberg data, as of October 2025, and Osborne Partners, “The S&P 500 Concentration.”  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            Bloomberg data, as of October 2025.  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            Diversification does not ensure a profit or protect against losses.  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            Pitchbook data, as of September 2024.  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            University of Florida, as of December 2024, “Initial Public Offerings: Median Age of IPOs Through 2024.”  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            World Federation of Exchanges.  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            S&P Global, “Private Markets – A Growing, Alternative Asset Class.” and “Private Markets: Still Waters Run Deep.”  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            Compares Cambridge Associates’ Private Equity Index to the MSCI World Index, as of March 2025.  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            There can be no assurances that any of the trends described herein will continue or will not reverse. Past events and trends do not imply, predict or guarantee, and are not necessarily indicative of, future events or results.  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            DealEdge, “Creating Value in Private Equity: Moving Beyond Multiple Expansion.”  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            The above is provided for illustrative purposes only and is based on Blackstone’s assessment of gains achieved by investments in Blackstone’s flagship corporate buyout funds only as of June 30, 2025. To determine sources of value creation, Blackstone analyzes key financial metrics at the time of acquisition compared to the current and/or exit period in order to estimate a company’s gain that is attributable to earnings growth, multiple expansion, and free cash flow (“FCF”) generation. For certain investments that lack significant previous operating or financial history, the categorization of the different sources of value creation represents Blackstone estimates based on a number of objective and subjective factors. Past activities of investment vehicles managed or sponsored by Blackstone provide no assurance of future success. There can be no assurance that future Blackstone funds will achieve the same or similar results or that pending or future initiatives will occur as expected or at all.  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            Represents EBITDA growth of investments with gains.  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            Diversification does not ensure a profit or protect against losses.  
                              
                        
                    
                   
                                                
                            US Family Offices: UBS Global Family Office Report 2025. US Endowments: Preqin, as of June 30, 2025. US Pensions: American Investment Council. Individual Investors: For Individual Investors, Cerulli Associates, “U.S. Wealth Management and Alternative Product Trends,” 2024.