Analysis reveals record-breaking private markets funds set for 70% growth by 2030

Unsplash - 22/07/2025

Global value of private assets held in funds has increased 9.6% this year to an all-time high of $14.05 trillion. Ocorian’s Global Assets Monitor forecasts global values will hit $23.9 trillion within five years with private equity nearly doubling to $17.4 trillion.

The value of global private assets funds has surged to a record $14.05 trillion this year, a rise of 77% since 2020, and 205% since 2015, and is forecast to climb 70% over the next five years to hit $23.9 trillion.  Year-to-date it has risen 9.6%. This is according to the latest Global Asset Monitor from Ocorian, a market leader in asset servicing for private markets and corporate and fiduciary administration.

Global private equity fund asset values will be the key driver of growth doubling to $17.4 trillion by 2030 with infrastructure, private debt and real estate funds also performing strongly taking the global value of the four sectors to $23.9 trillion.

Forecast global private markets growth 2025 – 2030

Asset class funds2025 value (start of September) Projected value by 2030
Infrastructure$1.35 trillion$2.3 trillion
Debt$1.36 trillion$2.4 trillion
Private equity$9.92 trillion$17.4 trillion
Real estate$1.48 trillion$1.8 trillion
TOTAL$14.05 trillion$23.9 trillion

Growth of listed and private global assets

The Global Asset Monitor, which analyses private market sectors as well as listed equities, sovereign bonds, corporate bonds and municipal agency and other bonds, estimates total global assets increased $24.08 trillion in the first eight months of this year to a record $267.0 trillion.

Within that total global private equity, private debt, infrastructure and real estate funds all hit record valuations and Ocorian forecasts growth will continue building on expansion over the past 10 years. However it believes growth in assets will drive consolidation with mainstream fund managers increasingly targeting the private markets sector.

Ocorian’s analysis shows 2025’s growth in private equity global assets to $9.917 trillion has been driven in particular by Asian markets which hit a record $2.1 trillion, up 15.8% in the first eight months of the year. They accounted for 30% of 2025’s growth despite only accounting for a fifth of assets.  Assets in North America still dominate fund holdings – Ocorian’s modelling shows they reached $5.6 trillion by early September, up 9.6% year-to-date.

Yegor Lanovenko, Global Co-Head of Fund Services at Ocorian said: “The decade ahead will be transformational for global asset management. By 2030, private assets could expand by more than 70% to almost $24 trillion, with structural shifts across investor profiles and how private markets products are distributed. 

“We are seeing a handful of global managers consolidate fundraising power, while new channels including RIAs, retirement schemes, and specialist platforms are reshaping investor engagement. For mid-market managers, this intensifying battle for distribution makes strategic partnerships, operational leverage and specialisation are vital. 

“At Ocorian, we help alternative asset managers handle operational and regulatory complexity across the full investment lifecycle, especially when operating scale is a differentiator and investor needs and profiles are evolving fast across asset classes.”

Global private markets growth since 2015

Asset class2015 value2020 value2025 value (start September)
Infrastructure$257 billion$652 billion$1.351 trillion
Debt$323 billion$691 billion$1.359 trillion
Private equity$2.274 trillion$5.781 trillion$9.917 trillion
Real estate$610 billion$820 billion$1.479 trillion
TOTAL$3.464 trillion$7.944 trillion$14.046 trillion

The view of private equity fund managers

An Ocorian survey of US based private equity professionals who collectively manage $335.25 billion in assets, reveals they expect capital from all major LP sources to rise, with family offices and pension funds leading the charge. Notably, HNW and UHNW are not expected to increase their capital subscriptions significantly (only 9.4% over the next two years) compared to 20.2% from pension funds and 17.8% from family offices.

However, as the market grows fear of regulatory creep is nearly universal – 85% of those surveyed expect more regulation, 88% expect more industry restrictions and fines, and 80% anticipate more time spent on compliance failures.

The ambition to use more third-party providers is partly driven by this complexity. 47% are already outsourcing more over the latest lifecycle, compared to 44% who have not made changes and just 9% who have brought more in-house.

More than four out of five (81%) expect to expand their reliance on third parties in the next two years, in particular, investor services and fund administration are the functions most likely to be outsourced, though reporting is also high up the list.

How private markets break down

Global private equity fund assets grew by 10.8% this year compared with 7.7% for private debt and 10% for infrastructure. Real estate lagged with growth of 3.1% but still hit an all-time high.

Ocorian’s analysis shows more than half (51%) of private equity funds under management are domiciled in North America while 31% are in Asia and European funds account for 14.9% of the total.

Around 62% of private debt funds are North American-based while 30% are in Europe and 5% in Asia.

Just under half of the underlying infrastructure assets are in North America while 38% are in Europe. Around 38% of funds are domiciled in Europe which is almost equal to North America.  Asian-domiciled funds account for 16%.

For real estate the asset mix is skewed to North American which accounts for 61% of assets held, with one fifth in Europe and one seventh in Asia.

Vincent Calcagno, Head of U.S. Growth at Ocorian, said: “The power of the industry’s largest players is growing as the need to bulk up to compete is driving consolidation across the industry.

“Mainstream fund managers expanding into private markets and big multi-decade players have a real competitive advantage in the power of their distribution channels.

“The shape of the market in 2030 is clear – a cohort of larger asset managers will become increasingly dominant in the U.S. and globally as the line between investment options for retail and institutional investors blurs.”

Related Articles

Sign up to the IFA Newsletter

Name

Trending Articles


IFA Talk is our flagship podcast, that fits perfectly into your busy life, bringing the latest insight, analysis, news and interviews to you, wherever you are.

IFA Talk Podcast – listen to the latest episode

IFA Magazine
Privacy Overview

Our website uses cookies to enhance your experience and to help us understand how you interact with our site. Read our full Cookie Policy for more information.