We believe the opportunity set for VC/growth secondaries is significant. Because it’s still early days for secondary investment in this space, there’s a limited supply of dedicated capital focused on secondaries. And the relatively small size of the secondary buyer universe in VC/growth drives structurally lower pricing compared to buyout, infrastructure, or private credit secondaries.
In parallel, use of direct secondaries has grown meaningfully in recent years. These are private equity transactions in which an investor purchases existing direct ownership stakes in individual companies from investors, employees, or founders, rather than buying into a fund. This growth reflects the broader trend of companies remaining private for longer.
Because companies are often staying private for several years longer than they used to, equity-holding employees at private companies face extended periods without liquidity. Companies used to discourage employee share sales, but now, with their trend of staying private for longer, many actively support or sponsor secondary liquidity programs. These can range from individual-employee-driven transactions to large-scale, company-led tender offer funds (a type of registered closed-end fund). These liquidity solutions could also benefit early-stage investors who may have similar liquidity concerns due to extended holding periods.
How VC and growth secondaries may fit in portfolios
The primary benefit of VC and growth secondary investments is the same as it is in other markets: the liquidity potential for LPs. Another potential benefit is that allocators can reposition their portfolios to focus on the managers they view most strongly by selling non-priority managers via secondary sales. This is particularly helpful in today’s market of ample capital but limited exit opportunities.
For investors and GPs, VC and growth secondaries can also provide a complementary way to access innovation-oriented private equity exposure. Compared with primary venture commitments, secondary investments may offer entry into companies that are further along in their development, with more observable operating performance, clearer market positioning, and, in some cases, a shorter path to liquidity. This can reduce some of the early-stage company risk associated with primary venture investing while still providing exposure to growth businesses that remain private for longer.
Entry pricing may also reflect discounts relative to NAV, particularly in periods of constrained liquidity. As a result, VC and growth secondaries may serve several portfolio roles, including diversifying venture exposure across vintages, gaining access to more mature private innovation companies, and complementing primary commitments with a potentially more selective, information-rich entry point.
What differentiates secondary buyers in VC and growth
As the VC and growth secondary market is rapidly evolving, we believe it is critical to evaluate the potential drivers of success in this growing space. In our view, access and underwriting capability are closely linked in the private equity secondary market. Because ownership is often fragmented and private company disclosure is limited, the ability to evaluate opportunities depends not only on seeing transactions, but also on gaining sufficient access to company and portfolio information to underwrite them effectively. This makes networks, relationships, and reputation important sources of competitive advantage, particularly when companies and GPs are selective about who enters the shareholder base.
But access alone is not enough. We believe success in this segment also requires deep company-level underwriting capabilities, including the ability to assess business fundamentals, competitive positioning, financing needs, and likely exit paths. In our view, the strongest secondary buyers are those who combine trusted access with the direct investing skill set needed to evaluate venture and growth companies on their own merits. Equally important, companies and GPs often prefer secondary investors who can serve as constructive, long-term partners, bringing credibility, stability in the shareholder base, and the ability to support companies as they continue to scale.