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From Alternative to Essential – The Change in Private Markets

Private markets have changed noticeably in recent years. What was long considered a niche allocation is now a central component of institutional portfolios. The decisive factors for this are structural trends such as demographic change, digitalization and decarbonization – all developments that permanently generate capital requirements and thus create predictable investment opportunities.

At the same time, the investable real estate and real asset universe has expanded considerably. In addition to classic types of use, specialized segments such as logistics, senior housing, social infrastructure or digital assets are becoming increasingly important. These areas benefit from stable demand profiles and deliver returns that are less dependent on short-term market cycles. The current adjustment and revaluation process in the commercial real estate market is reinforcing this trend, as price adjustments create the basis for selective, fundamentally driven investments.

For portfolios, this results in new sources of diversification and stability. Private market investments have a lower correlation to public markets and thus enable an effective compensation for yield fluctuations in the liquid part of the portfolio. At the same time, the demand for analysis and structuring is increasing: illiquidity, longer capital commitment and higher regulatory complexity require precise management.

Conclusion: Private markets are no longer a marginal issue, but a structural element of institutional allocations. If you clearly classify the different segments and their drivers, you can derive stable, long-term sources of income and a higher portfolio balance.

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