Udita Sharma
Udita Sharma
Investment Engagement Manager
Helped 500+ investors build
their investment thesis.
Pre-IPO & Secondaries

The Evolution of Private Market Liquidity: Debunking the Secondaries Discount Myth

June 27, 2026

[TL;DR]

  • Global secondary transaction volume reached $240B in the latest year — a 48% YoY surge.
  • Secondary pricing now operates in three tiers: premium, at-par, and discount — determined by asset quality, not transaction structure
  • The median private company lifecycle has stretched from 4–5 years (early 2000s) to 11–14+ years today — most enterprise value now created before IPO
  • A 20% discount can still be an expensive entry; an at-par transaction can be highly attractive — pricing quality matters more than pricing optics

The Shift

For a long time, the private secondary market was viewed through a singular, distorted lens. A secondary transaction conjured images of a distressed fire sale — investors backed into a corner, parting with prized assets at a steep haircut. As India’s alternative asset ecosystem matures, this misconception — the Secondaries Discount Myth — frequently resurfaces in allocation discussions among institutional allocators, wealth managers, and family offices. The reality could not be more different. Driven by secular macroeconomic shifts, the secondary market has transitioned from a fragmented, opportunistic marketplace into a highly sophisticated, institutional-grade liquidity tool. Secondary pricing today functions as an efficient, real-time price-discovery mechanism for private market value — not a bargain basement.

The Numbers That Prove It

  • $240B global secondary transaction volume in the latest year — up 48% YoY
  • 11–14+ years median private company lifecycle today vs. 4–5 years in the early 2000s
  • 100+ unicorns produced by India’s private market ecosystem — with the domestic IPO window remaining highly selective
  • 3 pricing tiers now govern secondary transactions — premium, at-par, and discount — based entirely on asset quality
  • EY India research confirms secondary transactions in mature market leaders increasingly clear at-par with primary valuation parameters when asset quality and governance are verified

Why the Old Narrative Is Obsolete

Three structural shifts have permanently invalidated the discount myth.

Prolonged private lifecycles have displaced value creation. In the early 2000s, the median tech company went public after 4–5 years. Today, scaled growth companies routinely remain private for 11–14+ years. Private companies now capture a vastly superior share of total enterprise value before ever tapping public equity markets. The secondary market exists to serve this extended private phase — not to signal distress within it.

Volume has reached institutional scale. Annual global secondary transaction volume has reached $240B — a 48% year-over-year surge driven by an influx of dedicated institutional capital. At this scale, pricing is dictated by institutional underwriting and asset quality, not seller anxiety.

DPI management has become a core LP tool. Secondary transactions are no longer ad-hoc negotiations. They are driven by institutional LPs actively managing vintage years and optimising Distributed to Paid-In Capital (DPI), alongside structured company-led ESOP liquidity programs. Selling is increasingly a sign of fiduciary maturity, not distress.

The Three-Tiered Secondary Market

The most significant flaw in the traditional narrative is the assumption that secondary pricing is a binary choice between a primary valuation and a markdown. In reality, the secondary market operates across three distinct structural tiers:

Pricing Tier Market Dynamics Asset Profile & Institutional Context
The Premium Market Demand heavily outstrips supply; cap table access is strictly rationed. Category-defining, mature growth companies with institutionalized governance, approaching imminent public listing.
At-Par Pricing Balanced institutional demand; strong fundamentals align with the latest primary round pricing. Scaled companies demonstrating robust unit economics, predictable growth, and clear structural pathways to liquidity.
The Discount Market Supply outstrips demand; historic primary valuations are misaligned with public multiples. Companies with stalled top-line growth, broken unit economics, or legacy cap tables requiring recapitalization.

The critical implication: when an asset boasts strong fundamentals, buyers do not receive an automatic discount for executing a secondary transaction. They pay fair market value — or a scarcity premium — to secure access to the asset’s future earnings power.

The Real Question Isn’t Discount vs. No Discount

The relevant question for sophisticated allocators is not whether a secondary transaction is available at a discount to the last primary round. It is whether the current price accurately reflects the intrinsic value, strategic positioning, and liquidity prospects of the underlying company.

A 20% discount can still represent an expensive entry point if business fundamentals are deteriorating or if the historic primary round was raised at an unsustainable valuation peak. Conversely, an at-par transaction can be highly attractive if the company continues to compound its earnings power and expand market leadership. Pricing quality matters far more than pricing optics.

Dismantling 4 Flawed Assumptions

1. “Anyone selling must be desperate”
Institutional LPs use the secondary market as a core portfolio management tool to lock in gains and recycle capital back to allocators. Founders and early employees frequently liquidate small, single-digit percentages of holdings to achieve personal financial security — allowing them to build for the long haul. Liquidity optimisation is a strategic choice, not an act of desperation.

2. “Large blocks require deep discounts”
Block size can influence pricing mechanics at the margin — navigating concentration limits, transfer restrictions, or ROFR — but the fundamental quality of the underlying asset remains the dominant valuation determinant. A large institutional secondary block in a highly coveted pre-IPO company can clear at-par because demand outstrips supply. A tiny stake in a stagnant company will face steep discounts because the fundamentals are weak — not because of block size.

3. “New buyers face an information penalty”
Modern institutional secondary buyers do not operate in the dark. Advanced alternative asset managers underwrite transactions with the same rigour, management access, and data-room transparency as a primary lead investor. By introducing stable, long-term capital and replacing exiting early-stage investors, sophisticated secondary buyers provide an essential service to the issuer — completely neutralising any perceived outsider penalty.

4. “Scale protects valuation”
Scale does not grant immunity. Scaled companies that raised capital on inflated primary rounds during market peaks often face the sharpest secondary corrections. In these instances, the secondary market provides an independent market-clearing valuation framework — repricing based on realised public-market multiples and current performance rather than historical funding headlines. Scale only protects valuation when accompanied by sustainable profitability and institutional governance.

3 Risks to Know

  • Stale Primary Valuations — A secondary transaction priced against a primary round from 18 months prior can inadvertently lock in a premium if the broader sector has corrected; always underwrite against current public-market comparable multiples, not historical funding headlines
  • ROFR and Transfer Restrictions — Late-stage private companies guard cap tables aggressively; Rights of First Refusal and board approval requirements can delay, alter, or block secondary transactions entirely — requiring experienced legal and relationship infrastructure to navigate
  • Governance Verification Gap — The premium and at-par tiers are only accessible when institutional governance is verified; transactions executed without rigorous data-room due diligence risk paying tier-one prices for tier-three assets
Q: What is the Secondaries Discount Myth and why does it persist?
A: The myth holds that secondary transactions are inherently discounted fire sales driven by distressed sellers. It persists because it reflects the reality of an earlier, less mature secondary market. Today, with $240B in annual global volume and institutional buyers underwriting with primary-round rigour, pricing is determined by asset quality and supply-demand dynamics — not transaction structure. The myth survives primarily in markets, like India, where the secondary ecosystem is still educating a new generation of allocators.
Q: Do secondary transactions always happen at a discount to the last primary round?
A: No. EY India research confirms that secondary transactions in mature market leaders increasingly clear at-par with primary valuation parameters when asset quality and governance are verified. Category-defining companies approaching public listing regularly trade at premiums in the secondary market because institutional demand for cap table access outstrips available supply. The discount tier exists — but it reflects weak fundamentals, not the transaction structure itself.
Q: What does a secondary share actually represent versus a primary share?
A: A secondary share and a primary share represent identical claims on the same underlying business, its governance, and its future cash-flow generation. The market prices access to future cash flows — not the route through which ownership changed hands. Over time, structural scarcity and fundamental quality of the business determine market value, regardless of whether shares were acquired in a primary round or a secondary transaction.
Q: Why is India's secondary market development particularly significant?
A: India has produced over 100 unicorns but the domestic IPO window remains highly selective and concentrated. As market leaders extend their private lifecycles, the secondary market is emerging as the critical liquidity bridge for founders, employees, early investors, and incoming institutional capital. The depth of India's secondary ecosystem may prove as vital to long-term private market sustainability as the growth of primary venture funding — providing the fluid capital recycling required to transition India from a market measured by capital deployed to one measured by liquidity realised.
Q: How should allocators evaluate whether a secondary price is attractive?
A: The relevant question is not the percentage discount or premium to the last primary round. It is whether the current price accurately reflects the intrinsic value, strategic positioning, and liquidity prospects of the underlying company. A 20% discount can be expensive if fundamentals are deteriorating. An at-par transaction can be highly attractive if the company continues compounding earnings power. Underwrite the business, not the transaction structure.
Q: What distinguishes institutional secondary buyers from retail participants in this market?
A: Institutional secondary buyers conduct due diligence with the same rigour, management access, and data-room transparency as primary lead investors. They have established relationships with existing cap table participants, legal infrastructure to navigate ROFR and transfer restrictions, and the sector expertise to underwrite realised unit economics rather than forward-looking projections. This institutional infrastructure is the primary determinant of accessing the premium and at-par pricing tiers — and avoiding paying tier-one prices for tier-three assets.
Udita Sharma
Udita Sharma
Investment Engagement Manager
Helped 500+ investors build
their investment thesis.

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