Alt Investments
Sixth Street Partners Builds Major Private Capital Pool - Report

The trend towards private capital investing - equity and debt - has been one of the strong trends in the wealth management space. The dislocations created by the pandemic appear to encourage more inflows into these spaces.
A former affiliate of private-equity firm TPG has reportedly
amassed one of the biggest pools of private capital on record,
tapping investor hunger for opportunities created by economic
uncertainty amid the pandemic.
Sixth
Street Partners has brought in $10 billion for its flagship
fund, a nine-year-old vehicle known as Tao, since it was reopened
to new investment in April, the Wall Street Journal
reported, citing unnamed sources. It now totals $22.5 billion and
the firm has told investors it would cap the fund at around $24
billion at the end of September.
The report said this figure puts the fund just behind the
record-breaking private-equity funds Blackstone Group and Apollo
Global Management finished raising in 2019 and 2017, which came
in at $26 billion and $24.7 billion, respectively. It would rival
the €21.3 billion (worth about $23.9 billion at the closing date)
buyout fund CVC Capital Partners completed this summer, the
WSJ noted.
More than $2.0 trillion has flown into global private markets, on
the debt and equity side, the report quoted advisory firm
Hamilton Lane as saying.
At a time when conventional bank lending has been squeezed by
tighter capital rules after the 2008/09 financial crisis and
ultra-thin official interest rates, and when listed equity yields
have also been hit, private market investing has grown more
popular. This publication notes continued interest in such
investment from family offices and wealth managers. Indeed, with
so much inflow, questions have been asked as to how all this “dry
powder” of committed capital can be profitably put to work.