Business
Private equity management fees hit new low in 2025
A view of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on Wall Street November 13, 2024, in New York City.
Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images
A version of this article appeared in CNBC’s Inside Alts newsletter, a guide to the fast-growing world of alternative investments, from private equity and private credit to hedge funds and venture capital. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox.
Private equity firms that raised funds in 2025 charged the lowest average management fee rates ever recorded, continuing a multiyear downward trend.
Buyout funds of last year’s vintage asked investors to pay a mean rate of 1.61% of assets, according to data through June from Preqin, published in a December report. That’s well below the legacy 2% management fee that the industry has been known for since its inception.
There are a few reasons for this trend toward fee compression – and they’re not all dire. Of course, the industry has experienced a difficult few years of fundraising, requiring many managers to offer fee discounts to secure commitments. Even still, the industry raised $507 billion in aggregate capital across 856 funds during the first three quarters of 2025, which is expected to be essentially the same amount as 2024, when the final quarter of the year is tallied, according to Preqin.
In response to a difficult fundraising environment, managers have been consolidating and capital is increasingly going toward the biggest funds. Nearly 46% of the capital raised in 2025 was done so by the 10 largest funds, up from 34.5% in 2024, according to PitchBook.
The rise in prevalence of larger funds is also why fees are compressing. Funds seeking more than $1 billion contributed to dragging down the mean, while middle-market and newer, smaller firms charged closer to that 2% figure, Preqin data shows. Larger funds can spread fixed costs – such as compensation, compliance and technology – over a broader base. In other words, just because fee rates are lower doesn’t mean the fee dollars are.
“In the near-to-medium term, we expect private-equity fee compression to continue,” Preqin’s Brigid Connor wrote in the report. “We believe the biggest driver of this trend is growing fund sizes.”
However, Connor said it’s unclear whether fund sizes will grow large enough to the point where private equity fees fall to the levels of actively managed, public equity strategies.
Preqin doesn’t break out details about incentive fees, which are typically paid when assets are sold or taken public, as a proportion of the appreciation. However, so-called realizations have been muted over the last few years after an onslaught of buyouts during 2020 and 2021 created a sizable backlog. Higher rates have increased the cost of capital – a headwind for managers seeking to monetize assets at higher valuations than they paid for them.
That dynamic led to the challenging fundraising environment and also made it more difficult for managers to collect sizable incentive fees.
There’s a broad expectation that could change in 2026 – especially if there are several more rate cuts from the Federal Reserve – and the gap between buyers and sellers of assets continues to narrow.
Business
IDFC First Bank share price today: Stock opens flat a day after 16% slump on Rs 590 crore fraud – The Times of India
IDFC First Bank share price today: IDFC First Bank stock opened in green on Tuesday a day after its shares recorded the worst crash since March 2020. At 9:18 AM, IDFC First Bank shares were trading at Rs 70.37, up 0.47%. The steep fall came on IDFC First Bank admitting to a Rs 590 crore fraud at its Chandigarh branch related to Haryana government accounts.IDFC First Bank on Monday said it expects to stay profitable despite a Rs 590-crore impact from fraudulent transactions involving Haryana government-linked accounts, even as its shares fell 16% during the day.Addressing analysts on a conference call, Managing Director and CEO V Vaidyanathan said the irregularities were traced to employee collusion at the bank’s Chandigarh branch. He said that KPMG has been appointed to conduct a forensic audit and noted that the bank has employee dishonesty insurance coverage of up to Rs 35 crore. According to officials, the fraud stemmed from forged cheques that were cleared at the branch.“This is a specific isolated incident that happened in one branch with one client group,” Vaidyanathan said, adding that it is confined to “a particular branch in Chandigarh and is confined to a limited set of Haryana govt-linked accounts.”He ruled out any digital compromise, saying that the episode involved physical cheque manipulation. “This is a physical transaction where the cheques have been forged. This is the oldest kind of fraud probably known to banking,” he said. “This looks to us on the basis of the work we’ve done clearly a case of employee fraud,” he added, noting that funds were transferred to beneficiary accounts outside the bank.Vaidyanathan said established safeguards such as maker-checker-authoriser controls, positive pay systems for cheques, scrutiny of high-value instruments, SMS alerts and monthly account statements were in place. However, he acknowledged that collusion among employees allowed the fraud to bypass these checks. “The issue in this case is that many of these people connived in making it happen.” The bank has decided to introduce pre-approval requirements for clearing all high-value cheques.In the Haryana Assembly, Chief Minister Nayab Singh Saini said on Monday that the funds involved in the IDFC First Bank Rs 590-crore fraud case will “definitely come back” and assured that appropriate action will be taken against those responsible.IDFC First Bank has suspended staff suspected of involvement. Vaidyanathan said KPMG’s forensic audit is expected to take “four to five weeks to conclude.”(Disclaimer: Recommendations and views on the stock market, other asset classes or personal finance management tips given by experts are their own. These opinions do not represent the views of The Times of India)
Business
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Business
Zoopla buys online business newhomesforsale.co.uk
Property portal Zoopla has bought newhomesforsale.co.uk as it continues to expand further into the new build market.
Zoopla said the deal – for an undisclosed amount – will see it buy 100% of the new homes property site, which has over 200 developer customers, supports 2,500 active property developments and connects over one million buyers with properties each year.
It comes amid a concerted push by Zoopla to grow its new build offering, having recently announced tie-ups with housebuilding giants Taylor Wimpey and Persimmon Homes.
As part of the efforts to further tap into this market, Zoopla has improved the visibility of new homes on its website and the consumer search experience, promoted the benefits of new builds and added features such as search by developer and affordability tools.
It has also rolled out the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to help lower the cost of attracting buyers, identify “higher-intent” customers earlier and make reservation pipelines more efficient for home builders.
Together, these product innovations have helped drive a 53% increase in the number of new home leads for builders year-on-year, according to Zoopla.
Paul Whitehead, chief executive of Zoopla, said the newhomesforsale.co.uk (NHFS) deal was “a natural next step in our strategy”.
He said: “Our recent partnerships with Taylor Wimpey and Persimmon demonstrate the progress we have made and the value we deliver.
“The addition of newhomesforsale.co.uk will strengthen our offer and deepen our relationships with home builders across the UK.”
After the deal, Stratford-upon-Avon-based NHFS will continue as a standalone brand and website, with its existing leadership team, led by founder and managing director Vernon Pethard.
All 10 staff – including Mr Pethard – are transferring to Zoopla following the deal.
Mark Hincks, director of newhomesforsale.co.uk, said: “Our focus has always been to connect developers with high-intent buyers and deliver a clear return on marketing investment.
“Joining Zoopla unlocks audience data, insights and innovation that will allow us to deliver even more value for our customers.”
Mr Pethard founded NHFS in 1998, initially offering a range of new homes newspapers, which later shifted online via the website in 2009.
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