Private equity's resilience during major crises

A 25-year analysis

By Nils Rode, Chief Investment Officer, and Verity Howells, Investment Research Manager Private Equity, at Schroders Capital

  • Private equity consistently outperformed listed markets during the largest market crises of the past 25 years
  • During the past 25 years, the outperformance from private markets was twice as high during crises relative to undisturbed periods
  • Distributions, a key concern for LPs, became less volatile during recent crises
  • Structural, fundamental and technical factors explain private equity’s outperformance
  • To navigate future crises, investors should consider diversifying within private equity and beware of boom-bust cycles

Over the past four years, financial markets have been subject to a series of shocks that have had far-reaching implications. From the global pandemic and subsequent shutdown of major economies to recent geopolitical tensions, the market environment has been rife with uncertainty. Adding to the complexity, record inflation and one of the fastest rate-hiking cycles in four decades have further challenged investors and businesses.

Amidst this turbulence, private equity still managed to deliver impressive absolute and relative performance.

Has private equity simply been fortunate during this recent period, or has its success extended to other crises? We have undertaken a broader analysis looking at the past 25 years. This period saw five major financial crises: the Dotcom Crash, the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), the Eurozone Crisis, the COVID-19 Outbreak, and the Return of Inflation.

During each of these crises, private equity outperformed public markets.

In this paper, we look in detail at each of the five financial crises outlined above. As well as exploring private equity’s performance compared to public markets, we also dig into volatility, distributions to limited partners, and the different types of private equity strategies that fared best and worst in each instance.

Our key findings are that private equity has consistently demonstrated resilience and superior performance during the greatest market disruptions of the last 25 years. Despite challenges such as high interest rates, inflation, and economic volatility, private equity outperformed public markets and experienced smaller drawdowns, with distributions becoming less volatile over time.

A closer look at which private equity strategies performed best during crises underscores the importance of diversification within private equity. This analysis highlights private equity’s potential as a robust component of investment portfolios, especially during periods of economic uncertainty.

Further reading : click here.

Media contacts

Wim Heirbaut

Senior PR Consultant, Befirm

Tânia Jerónimo Cabral

Head of Marketing Schroders Benelux, Schroders

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About Schroders Capital

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Schroders Capital

Schroders Capital provides investors with access to a broad range of private market investment opportunities, portfolio building blocks and customised private market strategies. Its team focuses on delivering best-in-class, risk-adjusted returns and executing investments through a combination of direct investment capabilities and broader solutions in all private market asset classes, through comingled funds and customised private market mandates.

The team aims to achieve sustainable returns through a rigorous approach and in alignment with a culture characterised by performance, collaboration and integrity.  

With $111 billion (£81 billion; €94.5 billion)* assets under management, Schroders Capital offers a diversified range of investment strategies, including real estate, private equity, secondaries, venture capital, infrastructure, securitised products and asset-based finance, private debt, insurance-linked securities and BlueOrchard (Impact Specialists). 

*Assets under management as at 30 June 2025 (including non-fee earning dry powder and in-house cross holdings)

Schroders plc

Schroders is a global investment manager which provides active asset management, wealth management and investment solutions, with £776.6 billion (€906.6 billion; $1064.2 billion) of assets under management at 30 June 2025. As a UK listed FTSE100 company, Schroders has a market capitalisation of circa £6 billion and over 5,800 employees across 38 locations. Established in 1804, Schroders remains true to its roots as a family-founded business. The Principal Shareholder Group continues to be a significant shareholder, holding approximately 44% of the issued share capital.

Schroders' success can be attributed to its diversified business model, spanning different asset classes, client types and geographies. The company offers innovative products and solutions through four core business divisions: Public Markets, Solutions, Wealth Management, and Schroders Capital, which focuses on private markets, including private equity, renewable infrastructure investing, private debt & credit alternatives, and real estate.

Schroders aims to provide excellent investment performance to clients through active management. This means directing capital towards resilient businesses with sustainable business models, consistently with the investment goals of its clients. Schroders serves a diverse client base that includes pension schemes, insurance companies, sovereign wealth funds, endowments, foundations, high net worth individuals, family offices, as well as end clients through partnerships with distributors, financial advisers, and online platforms.

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