

Alternative investments continue to gain momentum in 2026 as investors seek diversification, differentiated return characteristics, and protection against concentration in the public market. Once dominated almost exclusively by large institutional investors and ultra-high net worth individuals, the space has become a core component of modern portfolio construction.
Broadly defined, alternative investments include asset classes outside publicly traded stocks and bonds. These differentiated and often uncorrelated return profiles appeal to investors looking to diversify risk. Private markets are now approaching $20 trillion globally, drawing increased participation from both institutional and individual investors.
This outlook examines four segments driving allocation decisions this year: private equity, venture capital, hedge funds, and private credit.
Key expectations for 2026:
Private equity spans investments in privately held companies through leveraged buyouts, growth equity, and operational transformation. After years of stalled exits and elevated borrowing costs, dealmaking is gaining traction and liquidity pathways are reopening. Yet the recovery is uneven and selective, with capital concentrating among the largest managers.
PitchBook estimates the top ten private equity funds will capture more than 40% of all fundraising, intensifying challenges for emerging and mid-market general partners (GPs). Lower rates are improving leverage capacity and deal feasibility, with middle market loan costs down 3 percentage points from recent peaks. If the Fed continues cutting rates, return profiles could strengthen further, according to analysts cited by Morgan Stanley.
Technology, industrials, and insurance remain key areas of focus as investors turn toward platforms built around operational transformation rather than multiple expansion.
Key expectations for 2026:
Venture capital provides equity financing to early stage, high growth companies, particularly in AI, biotech, and climate tech. After two years of tight capital and weak exits, liquidity is improving and M&A markets are reopening.
Global M&A volumes surged in late 2025, with Q3 deal volume up 40% year over year. Lower financing costs and stabilizing rate expectations may further support activity through 2026.
Industry analyses consistently identify AI as a primary driver of investment activity. By Q3 2025, AI startups captured 65% of all venture capital deal value, and more than half of new unicorns were AI driven. PitchBook expects AI investment to expand into biotech, climate tech, fintech, and other innovation heavy sectors.
Key expectations for 2026:
Private credit (non bank lending to middle market, opportunistic, distressed, and asset backed borrowers) remains one of the fastest growing alternative segments. Expansion is being driven by tighter bank capital standards, evolving lending practices, and borrowers’ increased need for customized financing solutions.
Moody’s predicts private credit assets under management (AUM) will exceed $2 trillion in 2026, fueled by significant capital commitment from global cloud and technology providers. Their multiyear investment in data centers and digital infrastructure is resulting in increased demand for financing, fueling growth in asset backed and structured lending activity.
As the asset class expands, regulators are paying closer attention. Initiatives like the Bank of England’s 2026 exploratory review of private markets reflect concerns around a growing correlation with traditional finance and increased retail investor participation.
Key expectations for 2026 (based on industry research from Barclays, S&P Global, and BNP Paribas):
Hedge funds, using long/short, arbitrage, macro, and multi strategy approaches, enter the year with renewed momentum. After several years of mixed results, performance is stabilizing and dispersion is widening. Rising investor demand, combined with a macro environment favoring active management, supported strong results in 2025 and sets a constructive backdrop for the year ahead.
The industry continues to outpace cash returns, earning about 10.5% in 2025 and nearly 8% annually over the past five years. AUM are projected to reach $5 trillion by the end of 2027.
Alternative investment firms have significant room to grow in 2026. Those that stay ahead of regulatory shifts, global uncertainty, and market dynamics will be better positioned to attract capital and scale effectively.
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The information provided in this communication is of a general nature and should not be considered professional advice. You should not act upon the information provided without obtaining specific professional advice. The information above is subject to change.