Stage 1
Venture capital
Represents investments in early-stage companies with an idea for a new product or service. Private equity firms are essential partners in turning innovative ideas into viable, high-growth businesses.
Private equity offers access to non-public companies, emerging markets and innovative industries, providing opportunities for long-term growth. By investing across various stages of a company’s lifecycle, investors can tailor their portfolios to capitalise on specific growth trends and unique market opportunities, potentially enhancing overall portfolio performance and achieving higher returns.
With a proven track record and extensive reach across diverse markets, Franklin Templeton offers a wealth of expertise and opportunities in private equity. We can support you to navigate the complexities of the private equity landscape, ensuring you can make the most of your investments.
US$83 bn
Private equity assets under management
20+
Years investing in private equity
16
Global locations
Data as of 30/06/2025.
Private equity offers a wide range of opportunities across different stages of a company’s development from early-stage to mature buyouts. By diversifying private equity investments across these stages, you can tailor your portfolio to capture specific growth trends and market dynamics. This approach may help manage risk while maximising the potential for high returns.
Venture capital
Growth equity
Buyout
Risk
Highest
Lowest
Stage 1
Represents investments in early-stage companies with an idea for a new product or service. Private equity firms are essential partners in turning innovative ideas into viable, high-growth businesses.
Acting in a mentorship capacity.
Utilising their network.
Taking board seats.
Assisting with technology development.
Stage 2
Focus on established companies with a proven business model that are fast-growing. Private equity firms provide capital, offering both financial resources and strategic guidance.
Executing strategic growth initiatives.
Making strategic acquisitions.
Taking board seats without taking control of company or having heavy involvement.
Stage 3
Buyouts are the largest, most mature single strategy in all private markets and constitute a spectrum of transactions varying in leverage, size and strategies. The private equity firm plays a crucial and active role in acquiring and transforming established companies.
Leveraged Buyout (LBO)-Based on financial engineering
Equity Buyout-Generating higher potential profits from growth, expansion or transformation.
The appeal of private equity investing lies in its long-term approach to capitalising new businesses, developing innovative business models and restructuring distressed businesses. Due to its lower correlation* to public equity funds, they are a desirable diversifier in investment portfolios.
Private equity firms excel at executing strategic plans that drive growth and profitability. By leveraging their expertise in operational improvements, market expansion and cost management, they can significantly enhance a company’s value.
Private equity firms focus on active management. This can include restructuring operations, optimising capital structures or making strategic acquisitions, all aimed at increasing the overall enterprise value.
Private equity provides companies with substantial capital that might not be available through traditional financing channels. This capital injection supports growth initiatives, innovation and scaling, ultimately leading to higher potential returns for investors.
*Correlation is a statistic that measures the degree to which two securities move in relation to each other.
Private equity secondaries are a rapidly growing segment of the broader private equity market and an important source of liquidity for investors. Investors in secondaries are purchasing primary interests from large institutional investors like pensions funds and foundations and endowments when they need liquidity for rebalancing or strategic initiatives, often at attractive pricing.
The secondaries market has grown more than 3x since 2016, and as primary commitments rise, there could be room for even more growth within the secondaries market.
Annual Secondary Market Volume ($B)
Source: Jeffries Global Secondary Market Review. As of January 2025.
Unlike primary funds, secondary funds buy interests in funds that have mostly completed their investment periods, containing portfolio companies that are already generating cash flow.
As a result, secondary funds typically return investor capital sooner because they purchase stakes at later stages in the private equity lifecycle.
For illustration purposes only.
By purchasing interests in private investment funds when most or all of their capital has been invested, secondary funds reduce the blind pool risk* associated with primary fund investing.
Private equity secondaries are a rapidly growing segment of the private equity market and may provide an important source of liquidity for investors. In secondary investments, you purchase interests from large institutional investors, such as pension funds, foundations and endowments, when they need liquidity for rebalancing or strategic initiatives. These opportunities often come at compelling prices.

Diversified portfolios by sponsor, fund, sector, strategy, geography, industry, company and vintage year, which can potentially dampen volatility

By acquiring interests in established private investment funds, secondary funds generally receive earlier and more frequent distributions than a traditional primary fund

By purchasing interests in private investment funds when most or all of their capital has been invested, the blind pool risk associated with primary fund investing is reduced

By purchasing assets closer to their harvest stage and at a discount, investors can mitigate the J-curve effect associated with primary fund investing
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Private equity is at a turning point, with investors and advisors exploring the best ways to allocate across sub-strategies. There is a compelling case for private equity secondaries serving as the cornerstone of a core/satellite evergreen model.
Evergreen and closed-ended funds offer different paths to private markets - understanding their strengths can help investors optimise allocations.
The global secondary market has grown over the past three decades primarily because of the increased supply of capital committed to private investment funds, according to Lexington Partners. They believe the backdrop for the secondary market continues to remain attractive.
Many of the same issues that impact traditional investments also impact alternative investments. Explore our outlook for private credit, private equity, real estate, and hedge funds.
funds typically invest in equity capital that is not publicly available. Instead, the funds take direct ownership in private companies. Private Equity has the potential to provide above-market returns, with greater control, reduced liquidity and greater diversification, than traditional public markets.
is a form of private equity that investors provide to start-up companies and small business that exhibit high growth potential.
is a statistical measure of the relationship between two sets of data. When asset prices move together, they are described as positively correlated; when they move opposite to each other, the correlation is described as negative or inverse. If price movements have no relationship to each other, they are described as uncorrelated.
is a risk management strategy that mixes a wide variety of investments within a portfolio. A diversified portfolio contains a mix of distinct asset types and investment vehicles in an attempt at limiting exposure to any single asset or risk.
Important Information
Investments entail risks, the value of investments can go down as well as up and investors should be aware they might not get back the full value invested.
Individual securities mentioned are intended as examples only and are not to be taken as advice nor are they intended as a recommendation to buy or sell any investment or interest.
*Blind pool risk is derived from investors in a new (“primary”) private equity vintage that are investing in a relatively blind pool of assets. Secondary investors help eliminate this by investing in identifiable assets.
**The “J-curve” is the term commonly used to describe the trajectory of a private equity fund’s cashflows and returns. An important liquidity implication of the J-curve is the need for investors to manage their own liquidity to ensure they can meet capital calls on the front-end of the J-curve.
Investment risks
Private equity & venture capital investments involve a high degree of risk and are suitable only for investors who can afford to risk the loss of all or substantially all of such investment. Private equity investments and the vehicles that invest in them should be considered illiquid and their performance may be volatile. There can be no assurance that any investment will be adequately compensated for risks taken.
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