Asia-Pacific private equity fundraising falls to 12-year low

Bain & Co's report published on Tuesday shows Asia-Pacific private equity fundraising totalled US$58 billion in 2025, a 12-year low, as investments shift towards advanced manufacturing and healthcare for more predictable cash flows amid global uncertainties.

Private equity investment in the Asia-Pacific region is increasingly flowing into advanced manufacturing and healthcare, as global uncertainties push investors towards businesses with more predictable cash flow, according to Bain & Co research. Elsa Sit, practice vice-president in the Asia-Pacific private equity team with the global management consulting firm, said the move away from the previously dominant technology, media and telecommunications sector “has been a gradual move, driven by the external environment and uncertainties”. “We see a shift towards … sectors that can offer more stable returns and more predictable cash flows.” The shift came as fundraising for Asia-Pacific-focused private equity funds weakened, marking a fourth straight year of decline in 2025, according to Bain’s report published on Tuesday, based in part on a poll of 121 Asia-Pacific private equity general partners in November. Total capital raised by these funds fell to US$58 billion last year, a 12-year low, with the amount raised down 37 per cent from a year earlier. “Limited partners are more selective in picking the funds they want to bet on,” Sit said. “They are clearly backing those general partners who have a stronger track record, the ability to offer portfolio value-add, and to manage and exit the portfolio successfully and secure attractive returns for their limited partners.” The technology, media and telecoms sector remained the largest destination for Asia-Pacific private equity in 2025, but its share of deal value fell to a 10-year low – about 25 per cent, the report revealed.

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Illustration of Middle East tensions causing stock market drops, oil price spikes, and investor flight to US dollar.
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Middle East conflict fuels global market volatility and oil price surge

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Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, involving the US, Israel, and Iran, have triggered a slide in Asian shares and a surge in oil prices. Investors are turning to the US dollar for safety amid fears of prolonged energy cost increases and inflation. While emerging markets face short-term losses, experts see long-term resilience.

Boston-based Bain Capital has successfully closed a $12.5 billion fund targeting Asia and Japan. This achievement reinforces the firm's dominant position in the region. The development comes as global investors become increasingly selective.

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Asian stocks experienced a slight retreat from their recent peaks following a downturn in Wall Street markets. The decline was influenced by a subdued investor response to Nvidia's latest earnings report. Despite the pullback, Asian equities have outperformed global benchmarks throughout the year.

Hong Kong's initial public offering market has raised more than HK$140 billion (US$17.9 billion) as of April, maintaining its global lead, Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po said, while indicating a renewed push for gold trading amid rising demand for risk diversification. Chan stated on Sunday that the city remains the world's top IPO fundraising hub.

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Deloitte released a report in Hong Kong stating that the Greater Bay Area spent about 28.9 billion yuan (US$4.2 billion) on basic research in 2024, accounting for just 5.67 per cent of total R&D spending, below China's national average of 6.9 per cent and far behind the US's 14.5 per cent and South Korea's nearly 15 per cent. Despite strong tech potential, the southern China cluster lags in basic research and original innovation, with talent gaps adding to challenges.

A new report from Pax and Ican shows the number of financial institutions investing in the nuclear weapons industry has risen 15 percent to 301. Stock and fund investments now total over 709 billion dollars. “This is the most dangerous time in my life regarding nuclear weapons,” says ICAN program director Susi Snyder.

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Venture capitalist Nisa Leung says mainland China and Hong Kong should ease listing rules for biotechnology companies and lower takeover thresholds for listed firms to capitalize on renewed foreign interest in the healthcare sector. She made the comments in a sideline interview during China's annual meetings of the CPPCC and NPC.

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