Private equity exits settled at $100 billion in the second quarter of 2026, according to PitchBook's latest PE Breakdown report. The number marks a continuation of sponsor retreat from the exit cycle, with corporate strategic buyers now setting the rhythm for mid-market and large-cap transactions that financial sponsors would have typically absorbed twelve months prior.
The shift is structural, not cyclical. Corporate balance sheets carried $3.2 trillion in deployable cash at quarter-end, while PE dry powder sat at approximately $2.7 trillion across buyout vehicles globally. Strategic acquirers moved on 68 percent of exits by transaction count in Q2, compared to 44 percent in the same period during 2024. The reversal reflects two pressures: compressed sponsor hold periods colliding with elevated debt costs, and corporate acquirers exploiting valuation gaps that emerged when financial buyers stepped back. Where PE firms underwrote deals at 11-13x EBITDA in late 2021, corporates are now clearing assets at 8-9x with all-cash structures that sponsors cannot match without levering portfolio companies beyond prudent thresholds.
The operational consequence is a narrowing universe of secondary buyout opportunities and a lengthening queue of assets awaiting monetization. Sponsors holding companies acquired between 2020 and 2022 face a choice: accept corporate bids at valuations below carry hurdles, or extend hold periods into 2027 and beyond while servicing debt that was priced for a different rate environment. Limited partners are already applying pressure. Distribution-to-paid-in ratios for vintage 2020-2022 funds remain below 1.1x across most mid-market managers, and LPs are reducing follow-on commitments to funds that have not demonstrated exit discipline. The dynamic favors corporates with acquisition mandates tied to revenue synergies rather than financial engineering. Strategic buyers are capturing mature software platforms, healthcare services roll-ups, and industrial distribution networks that PE built but cannot efficiently exit through traditional sponsor-to-sponsor channels.
Allocators should track three developments over the next six months. First, secondary transaction volume in LP stakes and direct co-investment positions, which typically lags primary exit activity by one to two quarters and will signal whether institutional sellers are monetizing exposure ahead of valuation resets. Second, the spread between corporate M&A multiples and sponsor bid levels in sectors where both buyer types compete, particularly application software and healthcare IT, where the gap has widened to 1.8-2.3x EBITDA since Q1. Third, the composition of PE fund distributions: whether cash returned to LPs originates from strategic exits, dividend recapitalizations, or true liquidity events that close at or above cost basis.
The $8.4 billion Clearwater Analytics take-private by Permira and Warburg Pincus, completed concurrent with the Q2 data release, demonstrates that large-scale sponsor activity persists where public market dislocations create entry opportunities. The deal does not reverse the broader trend. It confirms that PE capital is rotating toward public-to-private transactions and away from competing with corporates for assets already seasoned in private hands.