How liquidity solutions are strengthening LP flexibility, empowering founders, and keeping capital flowing across tech.
Over the past five years, the venture capital landscape has undergone a major transformation. At the center of that change is the growth of the secondaries market, a once-niche tool that has now become a pillar of the ecosystem. While this shift has triggered concern about capital concentration and a slowdown in early-stage funding, it's important to take a broader, more balanced view: secondaries, on the whole, are a net positive for the tech world.
What began as a way for early employees and LPs to gain liquidity has matured into a robust and institutionalized market. The rise in GP-led continuation vehicles, tender offers, and structured liquidity solutions has created new flexibility across the board.
Global secondary transaction volumeis expected toexceed $210 billion in 2025, a massive increase from$60 billion in 2020.
LP-led shareof that volume has declined to54%, reflecting the growth ofGP-led deals.
InH1 2025 alone, over$103 billionin volume has already been recorded, putting us on track for another record-breaking year.
GP-led volumein the first half of 2025 is up68% year-over-year, driven by large funds, strategic recapitalizations, and late-stage value creation.
https://go.jefferies.com/l/399542/2025-07-22/5tb4pk/399542/17531934550cfOYM0Q/Jefferies___Global_Secondary_Market_Review___July_2025.pdf
This expansion brings major benefits:
Liquidity for LPs: Helping endowments, pensions, and family offices rebalance or realize gains.
Flexibility for GPs: Enabling them to extend fund life or double down on winners.
Support for Founders and Teams: Tender offers increasingly include employee participation, which strengthens morale and retention.
Rather than siphoning capital away from innovation, secondaries are helping torecycle itwithin the tech ecosystem, creating a more dynamic, long-term oriented market.
That said, rapid growth and capital flows don’t come without risk. The maturity of secondaries does raise some important systemic concerns:
Opaque structuresand stacked SPVs can create misaligned incentives.
High valuationsfor common shares with limited rights or protections.
Concentration riskwhen capital pools into a narrow set of well-known companies.
Fundamentals drift, reminiscent of the COVID/ZIRP era, where hype sometimes overtakes diligence.
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However, unlike 2020–2021, most of the companies raising large secondary rounds today are legitimate businesses: they have meaningful revenue, real customers, and growing traction. The valuations may still be ambitious, but they’re rooted in stronger fundamentals.
While secondaries are unlocking capital at the top of the stack, early-stage investing has cooled in parallel. This is a concern of mine as less capital is currently flowing to the early stages in the form of fewer deals being completed and emerging managers raising new funds.
U.S. early-stage fundingdropped from$242B in 2022to$170B in 2023.
In 2024, justtwo firms accounted for 44% of all new U.S. VC capitalraised.
VC fundraising in Israelfell74% YoY in 2023, the lowest since 2015.
Carta reports thatfunds under $100Mhave seen total commitments decline from$12.9B in 2021to$1.6B projected in 2025.
Emerging managers and founders at the seed stage are facing:
There’s no question that the flood of capital into secondaries createsrelative scarcityat the bottom. But the solution isn’t to slow secondaries, it’s toeducate LPs,build better early-stage platforms, andre-align incentivesacross the stack.
Secondaries are good. They are making venture more liquid, more mature, and more professional. They give GPs more tools, LPs more options, and founders more flexibility.
The key is to maintaindiscipline:
Don’t revert to pandemic-era habits of investing based on brand and buzz alone.
Maintain standards for governance, structure, and pricing.
Build bridges between the late-stage liquidity boom and the early-stage innovation pipeline.
Because at its best, a healthy secondaries market can be the engine that powersdurable innovation—not just at the top, but throughout the entire venture pyramid.
Let’s make sure the base stays strong too.
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