Tech-focused PE funds are rising and thriving

Tech-focused dry powder has almost doubled since 2016. The latest returns data available is through March of this year, when it totaled $93.1 billion across North America and Europe, according to PitchBook's recent analyst note on tech-focused PE funds. That marked a 93% increase from 2016's cumulative $48.2 billion of dry powder.

The vast majority of private equity tech AUM is housed in the US; over the past 20 years, North America has contributed over 95% of the tech-focused PE capital to North America and Europe. Tech funds themselves are starting to command a bigger share of the overall PE fundraising market, comprising nearly 22% of all PE capital raised so far this year across the two continents. Boosting that percentage were mammoth raises by Thoma Bravo and Vista Equity Partners, two of the so-called big three tech firms. Silver Lake is the third, but it will probably be part of the big five at some point, with firms like Francisco Partners and Insight Partners gaining speed.

Tech buyouts have mostly been high growth and high price-tag affairs in recent years. Relatively few of them are struggling, negating PE's historical role as the rescuer. Tech more broadly is also volatile, and market trends can always change with little notice. Add to that the fact that a large swath of tech companies are venture backed, and Silicon Valley is awash in available capital.

Many tech companies don't need PE's traditional skillset or its money, but the numbers continue to rise at a rapid clip. Buyout activity from the likes of Vista, Silver Lake and Thoma Bravo seems on par with M&A activity from the likes of Google, Amazon and Microsoft.

The landscape has changed, not only because of technology's promise as a sector but also because of PE-focused tech funds' outperformance. Over the past decade, tech-focused PE funds have generated IRRs that are more than five percentage points higher than non-tech buyout funds' IRRs and more than double those of non-tech PE growth funds. Results like those all but guarantee a strong fundraising market for the next ten years.

Perhaps we'll see more tech companies position themselves as buyout targets instead of M&A targets going forward, emphasizing a healthy balance of growth and profit instead of groundbreaking ambition and possible post-IPO disappointment.

This column originally appeared in The Lead Left.

Featured image via ijeab/iStock/Getty Images Plus

Read more about tech-focused PE funds in our recent analyst note.