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Private Equity 24 Hours

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11 articles summarized · Last updated: LATEST

Last updated: May 9, 2026, 5:30 AM ET

Private Equity Deal Activity & Sector Focus

Private equity firms are aggressively securing majority positions in specialized healthcare assets, exemplified by Amulet Capital acquiring TFP Fertility Group from Benefit Street Partners, integrating TFP’s network of 10 clinics and 21 satellite centers across the UK and Poland. This activity mirrors broader sector interest, as multiple firms, including Goldman Sachs, and QC Capital, are actively pursuing telehealth companies due to sustained remote healthcare demand, which also underpinned Siris Capital’s expected sale of Equiniti. Separately, FH Capital moving to acquire a majority stake in JinkoSolar’s US subsidiary, leaving the solar giant with a minority holding, suggests continued cross-border PE appetite for energy transition technology despite potential regulatory hurdles.

Venture Funding & The AI Wave

Venture capital deployment remains concentrated in artificial intelligence, with recent funding rounds topping the week’s largest infusions across enterprise AI, biotech, and space technology sectors, signaling sustained high valuations for deep tech. This AI focus is also materially impacting enterprise software, where companies in sales, marketing, and CRM categories have collectively secured approximately $2.7 billion globally so far in 2026, according to Crunchbase data for seed-through growth-stage funding. On the deployment front, specialized emerging managers are also closing initial capital, such as Mother Ventures successfully raising its $10 million debut fund aimed specifically at consumer products driven by mothers. Meanwhile, European defense startups, particularly those involved in missile technology, are being viewed by some investors as the next significant wave for defense sector deployment.

Investor Sourcing & Mandate Deployment

Institutional investors are setting cautious yet targeted allocation strategies for upcoming fund cycles. South Korea’s Kiwoom Asset Management planning risk-averse deployment indicates a preference for established markets, as the firm is actively considering North American and Western European fund commitments. In contrast, Montana Capital Partners is actively deploying $40 million across a mix of primary fund investments, secondary transactions, and co-investments, with a specific mandate centered on climate and social impact strategies. These defined mandates contrast with the lucrative exit environment seen by firms like Siris Capital, which is anticipating tripling its investment upon the sale of Equiniti, demonstrating the wide dispersion in returns across the PE ecosystem.