If you only skim headlines, private markets can still look like a one-way growth story. State Street’s 2025 Private Markets Study suggests a more mature picture: allocations are still rising, but the pace is leveling off, and institutions are getting crisper about what they’ll pay up for, both by asset type and by region.
The era of broad, default overweighting is giving way to something healthier: more concentration in conviction themes and more selectivity around managers, structures, and where returns are actually being earned.
Respondents in the 2025 study still expect private markets to take a larger share of portfolios, but not dramatically so.
Both LPs and GPs now project a roughly 42% private / 58% public split within three to five years. That is only a modest step up from current allocations of about 39% private / 61% public for LPs and 38% / 62% for GPs. A year earlier, LPs projected a similar 41% / 59% mix, but GPs were more optimistic, expecting clients to reach 45% private over the same horizon.
State Street links this moderation to a clear trend: higher rates and more expensive leverage have pushed investors toward “a smaller number of higher quality investments” rather than broad-based expansion.
For respondents who plan to increase private allocations, yield and return expectations are still the primary driver across asset classes.
Private credit stands out. More than 80% of investors planning to add to private debt cite performance or yield as a top reason. Private equity, infrastructure, and real estate also see return opportunities as the main motivation, but with an additional layer of portfolio logic.
Diversification is a consistent secondary theme across all four asset classes. Investors emphasise that private exposures help diversify away from listed-equity and public-credit cycles.
Hedging macro risks is a more asset-specific motive. Around a third of respondents increasing real estate and infrastructure allocations point to inflation and interest-rate hedging as key reasons. In other words, infrastructure and real assets are being used as partial macro stabilisers, while private credit is positioned as the yield engine and private equity as a way to access specific growth themes that may not be easily captured in public markets.
The clearest sign of a quality pivot appears in regional allocation plans. Between the 2024 and 2025 surveys, LP interest shifted noticeably toward developed markets. The share of LPs planning to allocate to developed Europe in the next one to two years jumped from a little over 40% to more than 60%. Planned allocations to North America ticked up from the high 60s to around 70%, and interest in developed Asia-Pacific (markets such as Singapore, Australia, Japan, Hong Kong and New Zealand) also moved up modestly.
State Street sets this against a backdrop of renewed uncertainty: the COVID-19 downturn and subsequent inflation shock, followed by new US tariffs and potential reciprocal responses. In that environment, institutions appear to be favouring jurisdictions they perceive as more predictable on rule of law, currency stability, policy direction, and the execution of large real-asset projects.
The survey language around “quality” is broader than simply “developed vs emerging” or “large vs small”. State Street notes that tariff-driven trade disruption may change which companies, sectors and regions look structurally resilient. For example, firms with lower US exposure in their end markets or supply chains may be comparatively better positioned if tariff frictions persist. Conversely, some sectors that face higher input costs, such as technology hardware and microchips, may still be advantaged by their strategic importance to defence, digital infrastructure, and long-term economic development.
In other words, risk is being reassessed along multiple dimensions at once: jurisdiction, supply-chain exposure, sector role, and the ability to adapt to a shifting trade regime. A simple split between “safe developed” and “risky emerging” markets understates that nuance.
Taken together, the study does not point to a reversal of the private-markets trend. It points to a plateau and a re-sorting.
Private markets are expected to stabilise around 40–42% of institutional portfolios, not push relentlessly toward 60%. Within that share, investors indicate a tilt toward fewer but higher-conviction positions where they see stronger fundamentals and clearer value-creation plans. They also place greater emphasis on resilience under macro and policy stress, rather than assuming that leverage and multiple expansion will do most of the work.
Regional mix is shifting as well, with a greater share of commitments earmarked for developed markets and more caution around emerging regions, even if the long-term growth stories there remain intact. At the same time, investors are using specific parts of the private-markets universe more deliberately: private credit and certain infrastructure strategies as yield and income engines, and real assets as partial hedges against inflation and policy shocks.
The message is less about reducing private exposure and more about being precise where it grows. The easy phase of expansion, driven by low rates and broad enthusiasm, has passed. The next few percentage points of allocation will likely depend on how convincingly managers and strategies can demonstrate quality under a more demanding definition of risk.
State Street 2025 Private Markets Study – Driving success in volatile environments.
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