Italy LMM PE Buyer Landscape 2026: 40+ Active Sponsors

Last updated: June 17, 2026.

Quick answer

We tracked 40+ active Italian lower middle market private equity sponsors operating across 2024 to 2026 in four clusters: mega-cap Italian and pan-European platforms (Investindustrial VIII €4 billion closed April 2025, Permira, F2i SGR at €8.3 billion AUM), Italian LMM specialists (Charme, NB Renaissance III at roughly €850 million by September 2025, Wisequity VI €400 million, Ambienta Small Cap Strategy €500 million, Clessidra CCP4 €270 million first close, Quadrivio Made in Italy II, Xenon VIII USD 551.6 million, Nextalia at €1.5 billion AUM, Progressio IV €335 million), international houses with material Italian desks (Apollo, Bain, BC Partners, Bridgepoint, CVC, KKR, L Catterton, Permira, Triton, Tikehau), and a parastatal plus banking-foundation block (CDP Equity, FSI, Italmobiliare, Exor, Compagnia di San Paolo at €10.1 billion portfolio, Fondazione Cariplo).

Three top-line findings shape this tracker:

  1. Italian PMI succession at 6.9 percent annual rate on a 4.5 million-enterprise base produces roughly 310,000 ownership transitions per year, generating the deepest European LMM transmission pool by absolute numbers (Firstonline / SDA Bocconi, ISTAT Structural Business Statistics 2023).
  2. 2025 produced a deal-count peak (887 transactions, +21 percent) while capital deployed declined from €14.9 billion in 2024 to €11.6 billion in 2025, alongside a fundraising drop from €6.673 billion to €3.570 billion. The contrarian read: more transactions, smaller average ticket, multiple compression from 9.8x toward 8.3x (AIFI 2025 release via Teleborsa, Argos Index Q4 2024).
  3. The 2026 Budget Law tightens the Participation Exemption (PEX) regime: capital gains qualify for the 95 percent IRES exemption only where the participation represents 5 percent of share capital or voting rights, or where the investment is worth at least €500,000. Combined with Golden Power filings crossing 835 by mid-2025 (+44.7 percent vs 2023) and the European Commission infringement procedure opened in November 2025 against Italian banking sector FDI discretion, cross-border deal timing has materially shifted (Bird & Bird, Fieldfisher, CELIS Institute).

This tracker is the Italian companion to the CT Acquisitions pan-European PE buyer tracker and sits within our European SME succession wave 2026 to 2030 series. Last verified: June 17, 2026.

Italy lower middle market PE buyer landscape 2024-2026 with 40 active sponsors data visualization
40+ active Italian lower middle market PE sponsors in 2024-2026, sourced from primary AIFI, ISTAT, CDP Equity, Banca d’Italia, Cassa Depositi e Prestiti, and sponsor disclosures.

Methodology and confidence framework

This tracker synthesizes primary-source data from the Associazione Italiana del Private Equity, Venture Capital e Private Debt (AIFI) joint annual statistics with PwC, ISTAT Structural Business Statistics, CDP Equity strategic plan filings, AIFI member directories cross-referenced against BeBeez weekly roundups, and the financial press of record (Il Sole 24 Ore, Reuters, Bloomberg, Financial Times) covering 2024 through mid-2026. Each sponsor row was checked against the manager’s own press release, fund close announcements, and at least one third-party trade publication.

Per-cell confidence ratings sit at one of four levels:

The geographic scope is Italian-domiciled sponsors and non-Italian sponsors with a confirmed Italian desk plus a 2024 to 2026 Italian transaction. The size scope is the Italian lower middle market as defined for this series: enterprise value of €15 million to €500 million per transaction, with a focus on €25 million to €150 million EBITDA targets where sponsor strategy bands disclose them. Take-private transactions are included where Italian-listed targets crossed our scope threshold.

Two caveats. First, AIFI’s 2025 disinvestment figure was reported as “4,661 milioni” in the Teleborsa wire (AIFI 2025 release) and we read this as €4.661 billion based on the consistency with a 19 percent year-on-year decline from the verified 2024 figure of €5.7 billion. Second, the Charme Capital Partners V fund vintage and size carry a GAP rating in this tracker: Bloomberg flagged a USD 700 million raise but the manager’s own funds page still references Charme IV (€850 million, 2021 vintage). We have left the Charme V row open pending direct confirmation.

The macro spine: AIFI 2024 to 2025 and the structural Italian PE gap

AIFI headline statistics

The Italian private equity market in 2024 staged a recovery rebound that 2025 partially gave back on the capital side while extending on the deal-count side:

The structural penetration gap versus France

Italian PE raised €5.3 billion in 2024 against France at €25.2 billion, a 4.8x differential despite Italian GDP at approximately two-thirds of French GDP. Of approximately 200,000 organized Italian companies with more than ten employees, fewer than 500 are listed on a regulated venue, around 2,200 are PE owned, and 800 carry private debt (Mindful Capital Partner / AIFI summary). The mathematical implication: Italy carries the largest absolute pool of family and founder-owned PMI in continental Europe and one of the lowest PE penetration rates per company, a setup that the AIFI deal-count peak in 2025 suggests sponsors are now actively working. Confidence: HIGH.

ISTAT and the PMI universe

ISTAT counts approximately 4.5 million Italian enterprises of which 99.8 percent qualify as SMEs, employing 13 million workers. Italian SMEs generate more than 65 percent of national value added and export 53 percent of national finished goods, ahead of the European average (ISTAT 2023 Structural Business Statistics, BusinessEurope). HIGH.

CDP Equity and the parastatal LP layer

Cassa Depositi e Prestiti operates direct equity through CDP Equity, which under its 2025 to 2027 strategic plan committed to deploy more than USD 4 billion of own capital and attract a further USD 5 billion from third parties into portfolio companies, new businesses, PE, VC, and real asset funds. In 2024 CDP Equity increased its Euronext N.V. stake, acquired 42 percent of agritech firm Diagram Group, and committed to FoF Venturitaly II, three PE funds managed by Fondo Italiano d’Investimento, and the Fondo Nazionale dell’Abitare (CDP Equity portfolio page, GlobalSWF). HIGH.

FSI SGR, controlled by CDP, runs the €2 billion FSI Mid Market Growth Equity Fund led by Maurizio Tamagnini. The second vintage closed in 2024 with majority international LP demand. Headline 2025 transactions: €200 million for 64.68 percent of Consorzio Casalasco (tomato derivatives, roughly €600 million revenue), targeting a €1.5 billion European aggregation toward an IPO above €1 billion market cap; approximately 80 percent of fintech bank venture TNB acquired from Azimut Libera Impresa for up to €1.2 billion including earnouts; and a minority stake retention in Missoni as the family pursued a full exit (Il Sole 24 Ore, BeBeez / italianfood.net). HIGH.

Fondo Italiano d’Investimento SGR is the largest Italian institutional investor in private capital. In June 2024 it began raising the Private Equity Italia Tre Fund of Funds (FOF PEI Tre) with a €600 million target; by February 2025 it had reached €230 million. In November 2024 it closed Fondo Italiano Secondario (FIS) at more than €215 million from LGT Capital Partners and Committed Advisors for the acquisition of ten Italy-focused PE fund stakes from UniCredit, and earlier in 2024 closed FIPEC (co-invest fund) at €82 million first close (Fondo Italiano press). HIGH.

F2i SGR, the country’s largest independent infrastructure manager, reached €8.3 billion AUM by end 2024 across equity and debt vehicles, and launched its Seventh Equity Fund alongside a new private debt fund with a combined €2.3 billion target (F2i press). HIGH.

Euronext Growth Milan

Euronext Growth Milan (the rebranded AIM Italia) registered 21 IPOs in 2024 and 22 IPOs in 2025, raising €126.2 million in 2025 with total market capitalization at €10.2 billion. The exit door ran faster than the entry door: 2024 delistings included Fenix Entertainment, IIG, Industrial Stars of Italy 4, Jonix, Softec, and Take Off. 2025 produced 19 delistings, eleven of which were driven by public acquisition offers or M&A, with Agatos, Arras, Eligo, Friulchem, G Rent, Prismi, Sipario Movies, and Visibilia Editore among the names. Bertolotti SpA announced delisting in early 2026 citing inconsistency between continued listing and growth strategy (financecommunity.it, IRTOP EGM 2024 report). HIGH.

The DOP food economy and the packaging cluster

Italy’s DOP and IGP food economy reached €20.7 billion production value in 2024, 19 percent of national agri-food, up 3.5 percent year on year and 25.3 percent versus 2020. Exports of Italian PDO and PGI products grew 12.7 percent to €5.15 billion in 2024, with 864,441 workers across 183,823 certified operators. AgriFoodTech captured €350 million in 2024 (Great Italian Food Trade). HIGH.

The Emilia Romagna packaging machinery cluster (IMA, Coesia / GD, Sacmi, Marchesini, Aetna / Robopac, Tetra Pak operations) recorded €9.5 billion turnover in 2024 (+3.5 percent) with €7.5 billion in exports (+3.8 percent, approximately 80 percent of total). This is the most consolidation-ready industrial cluster in the country for the next decade (Fachpack Italy 2025). HIGH.

The PMI 1-million succession pool: deeper than France or Germany on density

The CT Acquisitions pan-European tracker uses the headline framing of “1 million Italian PMI in succession over 10 years.” That number survives scrutiny on the wider PMI definition and is conservatively sourced.

The mathematics: Bocconi and CERIF data show that across 2013 to 2022 an average 4.7 percent of family firms underwent ownership change each year, and that this rate has accelerated to 6.9 percent annually in the most recent three years. Approximately 33 percent of natural persons holding more than 50 percent ownership shares in Italian PMI are now over 65, with 63 percent also serving as sole director or board chair. Total wealth in transition through 2033 has been estimated at almost €300 billion (Firstonline / SDA Bocconi, Bocconi University). Confidence: HIGH.

Applied across the ISTAT 4.5 million enterprise base, 6.9 percent annual succession produces roughly 310,000 ownership transitions per year, or 3.1 million across a decade. Narrowed to genuine PMI with paid employees (approximately 950,000 firms across the 1 to 250 employee bracket), the ten-year cohort sits at 650,000 to 1 million succession events. Narrowed further to the AIFI working definition of 200,000 organized companies with more than ten employees, the cohort still produces 138,000 succession events over a decade.

Why this matters versus France and Germany. France’s CRA / CCI data set succession-eligible French SMEs at approximately 370,000 over the next decade, with annual transmission running at roughly 37,000 firms per year. Germany’s KfW and IfM Bonn data put the comparable figure at approximately 600,000 succession-ready Mittelstand businesses across 2024 to 2028. Italy’s headline number is structurally larger on density: Italy carries approximately 75 enterprises per 1,000 inhabitants versus 60 in France and 45 in Germany, so the succession dollar opportunity per PE fund of mid-market scale is larger in absolute terms than the headline 1 million PMI framing implies (ISTAT). Confidence: HIGH on Italian figures, MEDIUM on the cross-country comparison given national-statistics methodology differences.

The 2025 split: deal-count peak versus capital-deployed decline

The 2025 AIFI annual data set produced what we read as the single most important contrarian signal in this tracker: 887 transactions executed (+21 percent vs 2024) while capital deployed fell from €14.9 billion to €11.6 billion (a 22 percent decline), and fundraising compressed 46 percent from €6.673 billion to €3.570 billion.

This pattern is the precise inverse of the 2025 pan-European trend, where fewer transactions on bigger funds produced larger average tickets. The mathematical implication for Italian average deal size: €14.9 billion across 732 deals in 2024 produces an average ticket of approximately €20.4 million; €11.6 billion across 887 deals in 2025 produces an average ticket of approximately €13.1 million, a roughly 36 percent compression. Italian sponsors in 2025 chose to deploy smaller checks more frequently, a strategy consistent with the family-owned PMI succession opportunity but inconsistent with institutional LP demand for fewer, more scalable platforms (AIFI 2025 release). HIGH.

The second-order implication is that Italian LMM platforms transacted in 2025 will need aggressive bolt-on roll-ups to reach a credible exit scale for a 2028 to 2030 sponsor-to-sponsor or trade sale. The buyer-side message: target ticket sizes that fit the Italian sponsor capacity at €5 million to €30 million EBITDA carry abundant capital and competitive auctions, while platform-scale assets at €50 million-plus EBITDA face thinner Italian sponsor cover and depend on international auction processes. Sellers in the €5 million to €30 million EBITDA band should expect higher process tempo and the largest sponsor turnout of the cycle.

The 2026 Budget Law: PEX tightening at 5 percent or €500,000

Italian companies have historically enjoyed a 95 percent IRES exemption on capital gains from share disposals where (a) the shareholding has been held uninterruptedly for at least twelve months prior to sale, (b) the investment was classified as a financial fixed asset in the first uninterrupted ownership year, and (c) the subsidiary actually conducts commercial activity (PwC Italy corporate tax summary). HIGH.

Under the 2026 Budget Law, the PEX qualifies only where the participation represents at least 5 percent of share capital or voting rights, held directly or indirectly. Alternatively, the 95 percent exemption now requires the investment to be worth at least €500,000. PEX-qualifying losses can be offset against the 5 percent realized capital gains on substantial shareholding disposals, with excess loss carryforward usable for four following fiscal years (Bird & Bird, We Wealth). HIGH.

In 2024 the PEX regime was extended to non-resident EU and EEA companies and entities, materially expanding cross-border deal structuring options (Forvis Mazars). HIGH.

The deal-structuring read for PE buyers and sellers. Italian PE has historically layered a “Holding SRL” between the operating target and the fund vehicle, capturing the 95 percent PEX benefit on exit. The 2026 PEX tightening raises the cost of exit on small minority stakes and selectively penalizes Italian Holding SRL stacks that previously held sub-5 percent positions for tax efficiency. Expect Italian PE deal structures to push toward larger blocks and to discourage syndicated club deal partial sells, with second-order pressure on 2026 to 2027 exit pricing. For sellers, the practical effect is that small-minority secondary sells from Italian-domiciled Holdcos lose the 95 percent shield unless the €500,000 absolute threshold is hit, which may push more transactions toward full-exit structures or restructure pre-sale into single-target SPVs sized above the threshold.

Golden Power: 835 filings, +44.7 percent, and the EU infringement procedure

Italy expanded the Golden Power foreign direct investment screening regime in 2024 to 2025 to include cloud computing, data centres, artificial intelligence and algorithmic decision systems, advanced semiconductor design and production, submarine cable networks, critical digital infrastructure, agricultural biotechnology, and food security technologies. Filing volume crossed 835 notifications by mid-2025, up 15 percent on 2024 and 44.7 percent above the 2023 base of approximately 577 (Fieldfisher Italy FDI screening 2025, Ropes & Gray Golden Power 2026). HIGH.

The landmark case anchors the timeline: UniCredit’s November 2024 offer for Banco BPM cleared Golden Power in April 2025 with conditions including a five-year loan-to-deposit ratio floor, project finance portfolio restrictions in Italy, a sovereign bond commitment for Banco BPM asset manager Anima SGR, and a requirement that UniCredit discontinue its Russian operations within nine months. The European Commission in November 2025 opened an infringement procedure against Italy’s broad discretionary FDI powers in the banking sector, asserting they breach EU rules on freedom of establishment and capital movement. The 2026 Italian reform package is in process (White & Case Italian Golden Power 2026, CELIS Institute). HIGH.

The PE execution read: Italian Golden Power is now genuinely embedded in deal execution timelines, especially for cross-border bids on industrial, defense, telecom, energy, finance, and critical tech assets. The European Commission infringement procedure may force a 2026 to 2027 narrowing of the banking-sector discretion, but the operational impact for PE through 2026 is incremental friction not relief. Practitioners should budget six to eight weeks of incremental clearance time for sensitive sectors in 2026, and should structure offer letters to permit cleanly walking from Golden Power conditions imposed post-signing.

Italian tax and regulatory backdrop: PIR, carry, R&D super-deduction

PIR (Piani Individuali di Risparmio)

PIR were introduced by Article 1, commas 100 to 114, Law 232/2016 (Legge di Bilancio 2017). The tax framework treats capital gains and dividends as exempt from the 26 percent substitute tax (or IRPEF for qualified shareholdings) if held at least five years; assets in a PIR are excluded from inheritance tax. The investment constraint requires at least 70 percent of portfolio in Italian or EU companies with Italian operations, of which 25 percent must be in SMEs not listed on major indices. The annual contribution cap is €40,000 and the total cap is €200,000. Early withdrawal before five years voids the exemption retroactively (Lexology, Bayes Investments, Bank of Italy economiapertutti). HIGH.

A July 2025 anticipatory decree amendment kept the €200,000 cap but permitted diversification across multiple PIRs from the same intermediary, which was previously blocked (We Wealth). HIGH.

The Alternative PIR (PIR Alternativo) regime, with a higher cap and looser listing exclusion, has been the principal channel for retail LP capital into Italian PE and private debt vehicles since 2020. HIGH on regime mechanics, MEDIUM on retail LP take-up volumes.

Carry interest at 26 percent

Italian carry interest taxation is governed by Article 60 of Decree Law 50/2017 (“Manovra Correttiva”), which treats carry distributed to managers as financial income (26 percent substitute tax) rather than employment income, provided the managers commit at least 1 percent of fund capital and hold for at least five years. The headline 26 percent substitute tax rate on financial income remained in place through 2024 to 2025. Crypto gains substitute tax rises from 26 percent to 33 percent on January 1, 2026, but PE carry treatment remains anchored at 26 percent under the 2017 framework (PwC Italy, EY 2025 budget law). HIGH.

Patent box replaced by 110 percent R&D super-deduction

Italy repealed its patent box regime in 2021 and replaced it with a 110 percent super-deduction on R&D expenses for software protected by copyright, patents, designs, and other legally protected inventions. Qualifying spend includes R&D personnel, technical and legal advice, depreciation, and leasing fees (Tax Foundation Europe, Taxdry 2025 Patent Box, BDO original repeal note). HIGH.

For PE, the practical effect: software, deep-tech, and life-sciences acquisitions executed via Italian-domiciled targets carry a domestic R&D tax shield that survives the patent box repeal. Investment-thesis modelling should bake the 110 percent super-deduction into post-acquisition operating EBITDA where qualifying spend exceeds 5 percent of revenue.

Banking foundation LP gravity: the inelastic Italian capital base

The Italian bank foundation ecosystem (Fondazione Cariplo, Compagnia di San Paolo, Fondazione Monte dei Paschi di Siena, Fondazione Cariparma, among others) emerged from the 1990s bank privatization. Compagnia di San Paolo and Fondazione Cariplo signed a multiannual joint investment programme in PE and VC to combine resources at scale. At end 2024 Compagnia di San Paolo’s total financial asset portfolio market value was €10.1 billion, with positions across listed equities, government and corporate bonds, PE, VC, hedge funds, and infrastructure (Compagnia di San Paolo asset management, joint programme announcement, IPE feature). HIGH.

The contrarian read on this LP block: Italian banking foundations are structurally over-allocated to Italy versus cross-border by mission, not by performance. Compagnia di San Paolo and Fondazione Cariplo’s joint programme explicitly combines resources to invest in PE and VC oriented to Italian regional development. The implication for Italian LMM sponsors is that they face an “inelastic LP” who will continue to fund domestic vehicles even when cross-border European PE produces better risk-adjusted returns. This keeps Italian dry powder structurally above what global LP demand would otherwise sustain, and is one mechanical reason why 887 transactions cleared in 2025 even as the fundraising cycle compressed.

CDP Equity and FSI: the parastatal sponsors that double as anchor LPs

CDP Equity and FSI SGR sit in a category of their own. They are Italian-government-adjacent sponsors that act as both direct sponsor of control and growth equity transactions and as anchor LP in third-party Italian PE funds. The CDP Equity 2025 to 2027 strategic plan commits USD 4 billion of own capital plus USD 5 billion attracted from third parties across portfolio companies, new businesses, PE, VC, and real assets (CDP Equity portfolio). HIGH.

FSI SGR’s €2 billion second fund, led by Maurizio Tamagnini and closed in 2024 with majority international LPs, executed three category-defining 2025 transactions:

Investindustrial VIII and the Recordati take-private

Investindustrial Group, led by Andrea Bonomi from London and Lugano, closed Fund VIII in April 2025 above target at €4 billion. The Luxembourg-domiciled vehicle drew 57 percent European LPs, 23 percent North American, and 20 percent Rest of World. Investindustrial targets Southern European mid market with a €50 million to €250 million EBITDA bracket on platforms, with industrial, consumer, and healthcare as anchor verticals (Alternatives Watch). HIGH.

2024 to 2026 Investindustrial activity includes the acquisition of aerospace components platform Gruppo Logic from the Foresio family, the addition of DEA Group (DEA System, DEA HT) to its Advanced Control Solutions (ACS) platform, and an ongoing Marcolin process (BeBeez weekly roundup). HIGH.

The headline take-private of the cycle is Recordati. In May 2026 a CVC-led consortium (CVC, GBL, ADIA, CPP IB, and Andrea Recordati) launched a €10.7 billion cash bid at €51.29 per share, a 12.89 percent premium, valuing the enterprise at approximately €12.9 billion. CVC already controlled 46.8 percent of Recordati pre-bid (Reuters wire, Pharmaceutical Technology). HIGH.

Charme V dry-powder thesis (size and vintage GAP-flagged)

Charme Capital Partners, founded by Matteo Brignone in Milan, runs Charme IV at €850 million (2021 vintage), an Italian, Spanish, and UK mid-market fund targeting €10 million to €50 million EBITDA businesses. Portfolio activity includes the majority acquisition of Bianalisi (healthcare diagnostics) under Charme IV (Charme funds page).

Charme V status carries a GAP rating in this tracker. Bloomberg flagged a USD 700 million raise for Charme V (Bloomberg flag), but the manager’s funds page still references Charme IV as the current vehicle at the date of this tracker, and a direct press release confirming Charme V vintage and final close size was not surfaced. We flag Charme V as an open verification item: if confirmed at the €700 million to €850 million size band Bloomberg flagged, it would redirect at least €500 million into Italian mid-cap and create a fourth pole alongside Wisequity VI (€400 million), Progressio IV (€335 million), and Clessidra CCP4 (€500 million target). Combined dry powder dedicated to Italian sub-€50 million EBITDA targets in that scenario crosses €1.7 billion for vintage 2024 to 2025, an all-time peak that mathematically tightens entry valuations. Confidence: GAP pending Charme press release.

Exit windows: where Italian sponsors actually sell into in 2026 to 2028

The 2024 to 2026 disinvestment record gives a usable shape for Italian sponsor exits across the next 24 months. AIFI’s 2024 disinvestment cycle ran at €5.7 billion at cost (up 231 percent from €1.73 billion in 2023); 2025 settled at approximately €4.661 billion (down 19 percent). The composition tells the story:

For sellers, the practical read: in the €5 million to €30 million EBITDA band, Italian LMM sponsor-to-sponsor is by far the most likely exit, with the buyer-side bench dominated by Wise Equity, Aksia, Xenon, Riello, Alto, and Progressio. In the €30 million to €100 million EBITDA band, expect a mix of strategic Italian consolidators, larger LMM specialists (Charme, NB Renaissance, Clessidra), and FSI. Above €100 million EBITDA, international mega-cap cover is real but slower because of Golden Power and PEX adjustments.

Active 2024 to 2026 Italian LMM sponsors

The table below indexes 40+ active Italian LMM PE sponsors with current fund vintage, LMM sub-fund (where disclosed), typical EBITDA range, sector focus, headline 2024 to 2026 deals, and per-row confidence. Sponsors are grouped by cluster.

Cluster 1: Mega-cap Italian and pan-European with material Italian footprint

Cluster 2: LMM specialist Italian and Italy-focused

Cluster 3: Family offices and banking foundations as direct PE actors

GAP: Sub-fund level commitments and Italian LP allocations to Italmobiliare and Exor PE programmes would need confirmatory annual reports for full attribution.

Cluster commentary: mega-cap Italian and pan-European with Italian footprint

Investindustrial sits at the apex of this cluster as the only genuinely Italian-led sponsor of mega-cap scale, with €4 billion in Fund VIII closed in April 2025 and a clear Southern European mid-market mandate. CVC, Permira, Bain, BC Partners, Apollo, Advent, Blackstone, Clayton Dubilier & Rice, TPG, KKR, and Platinum Equity all operate Italian desks or roving Italian-deal teams. The 2024 to 2026 deal record shows a clear pattern: international houses bid for Italian crown-jewel branded assets (luxury, pharma, infrastructure) at platform scale, while Italian LMM specialists fill the €15 million to €150 million EV layer underneath. CDP Equity and F2i act as anchor-of-last-resort in critical infrastructure and strategic verticals where Golden Power clearance would otherwise complicate a non-Italian sponsor’s bid.

The Recordati take-private at €10.7 billion is the headline deal of the cycle and signals continued international appetite for Italian-listed mid-cap pharma at premium multiples. The Permira exit on Golden Goose at €2.5 billion EV (a roughly 1.9x money multiple on the 2020 entry at €1.3 billion) underlines the limited-but-real Italian luxury exit window for sponsor-to-sponsor or sponsor-to-strategic transactions in the €1 billion to €3 billion EV band.

Cluster commentary: LMM specialists and the Italian sub-€50 million EBITDA tier

The Italian LMM specialist tier in 2024 to 2026 is the single most productive cluster in this tracker. Wise Equity, NB Renaissance, Ambienta Small Cap, Clessidra, Xenon, Quadrivio, Style Capital, Aksia, Progressio, Riello, Nextalia, and Green Arrow each closed or sized new vehicles in 2024 to 2025, and each executed multiple bolt-on or platform transactions during the window. The cluster shares three characteristics:

Cluster commentary: international sponsors with Italy desks

International sponsors with Italy desks (CVC, Permira, KKR, Bain, BC Partners, Bridgepoint, Triton, L Catterton, Tikehau, Apollo, Advent, Blackstone, CD&R, TPG, Platinum Equity) are sized to write tickets of €50 million to €500 million-plus EV in Italian targets. Their 2024 to 2026 activity is concentrated in three lanes: (a) take-privates of Italian-listed mid-cap (Recordati, BF, Banco BPM in financials), (b) exits of Italian luxury and consumer assets (Golden Goose, Versace via Prada), and (c) infrastructure and energy transition (Sorgenia, Sonnedix Italian solar, Encavis Italian solar, F2i co-invests). The structural read for Italian sellers above €50 million EBITDA: international sponsor cover is real and competitive, but Golden Power clearance and PEX considerations now embed six to eight weeks of incremental deal timing and require Italian local counsel from day one of process design.

Tikehau Capital is the standout among international houses for its 2024 to 2026 Italian growth trajectory. Tikehau’s first Italian real estate credit transaction in 2025, four real estate credit deals closed during the year, the Bologna build-to-sell development announced June 2026, the appointment of Daniele Germano as co-head Italy in November 2025, and the Dedalus €180 million private credit exit (one of the largest Italian private credit deals of the cycle) together signal a multi-asset Italian platform build-out by the manager (Alternative Credit Investor, Tikehau press). HIGH.

Cluster commentary: family offices and banking foundations

Italmobiliare, controlled by the Pesenti family at 49.1 percent, is the most active Italian family-office direct PE actor in the 2024 to 2026 window. Italmobiliare co-invested with Clessidra CCP IV on MICROTEC (April 2025), grew the Caffè Borbone perimeter by 10.8 percent, grew Bene Assicurazioni by 21.7 percent, grew CDS Casa della Salute by 26.8 percent, and posted Gruppo Clessidra intermediation margin of €32 million through nine months of 2025, up 16 percent year on year. Italmobiliare is also an LP across the Clessidra CCP3, CCP4, Restructuring, Private Debt, and CRF Parallel funds (Italmobiliare interim report, Q1 2025 slides). HIGH.

Compagnia di San Paolo and Fondazione Cariplo together act as the most important Italian LP block outside of the parastatal CDP / FSI capital. The joint programme produces a domestic capital floor that is missing in France (where banking foundation equivalents are smaller and less active) and that is structurally different from Germany (where Sparkassen and Volksbanken act more through Mittelstand lending than through PE LP commitments).

2024 to 2026 deal flow timeline

Take-privates from Borsa Italiana and EGM

Sponsor-to-sponsor and family exits

Cross-border into Italy

Mid-market platforms and add-ons

Multiples by deal size band

Argos mid-market eurozone tracker

Argos Wityu’s eurozone mid-market tracker (deals at €15 million to €500 million EV) recorded Q4 2024 at 9.8x EBITDA average acquisition multiple, with PE fund multiples at 10.3x (up 2 percent QoQ). Italy specifically saw mid-market deal volume up 16 percent across H2 2024 (Argos Index Q4 2024). The most recent Argos Q4 2025 readout shows continued recovery toward roughly 8.3x median, with Italian deals tracking the broader trend. HIGH.

European comparable multiples

European PE buyer median sits at 11.2x EBITDA (versus corporate buyer at 8.5x) in H1 2025 across mid and large deals; US PE 12.8x (CLFI 2025 multiples). HIGH.

Italian LMM specific entry multiples

Italian LMM (sub-€100 million EV) typically transacts at 6x to 8x EBITDA. Platform deals at €100 million to €500 million EV transact in the 8x to 10x range. Sector spread is wide:

Chambers Italy 2025 to 2026 commentary highlights that PE-led transactions continue paying materially higher EV/EBITDA in software, healthcare services, and IT infrastructure, while the broader mid-cap market sees entrepreneur-driven price expectations remaining sticky high (Chambers Italy PE 2025). HIGH.

Sector mix in 2024 AIFI deal data

By transaction count, ICT ranked first in 2024 with 30 percent of total operations, industrial goods and services 17 percent, medical 11 percent. Software development was approximately 12 percent of all PE deals; industrial equipment and machinery 6 percent; automotive components and business support filled the next bracket (AIFI Annuario). HIGH.

PIR-driven valuation effect on EGM small caps

The PIR / Alternative PIR retail vehicle consistently captures a portion of FTSE Italia PIR PMI and Mid Cap index constituents at a premium of approximately 0.5x to 1.0x EBITDA over comparable non-PIR-eligible peers, per index-relative performance tracking. This means LMM targets that are also EGM-listed and PIR-eligible carry a structural retail bid that compresses PE arbitrage on take-private bids (LSEG FTSE Italia PIR PMI ground rules). GAP on direct empirical PIR premium quantification: requires Banca d’Italia or Borsa Italiana PIR fund flow data overlay against index performance over 2017 to 2025.

Sector consolidation themes

Italian luxury, fashion, and design

Active sponsors include Permira (Golden Goose, divested 2025), Style Capital (Autry consolidation), Quadrivio Made in Italy Fund and Lifestyle Fund II (Dondup, GCDS, Cover50, PROSIT, Ghoud, 120% Lino, Rosantica, Sessùn), FSI (Missoni minority retention), and CVC and Investindustrial historically. Strategic Italian-listed players (Prada, Moncler, Zegna, Cucinelli, Ferragamo) increasingly act as consolidators, exemplified by Prada / Versace (December 2025 close at €1.25 billion EV). The structural reason Italian luxury continues to attract cross-border PE and trade-buyer M&A: the five largest Italian-owned listed luxury groups combined post revenues materially below Kering’s roughly €17 billion, leaving room for both consolidation and new entrants. HIGH.

Italian specialty mechanical engineering and packaging

Active sponsors include Investindustrial (Gruppo Logic aerospace, ACS / DEA System), Wise Equity (B2B niches), NB Renaissance (manufacturing, aerospace, defense), Aksia (Kintek industrial components), Nextalia (Westrafo transformers), and Xenon (Azeta, Elettrolinee). The Emilia Romagna packaging cluster (IMA, Coesia, Sacmi, Marchesini, Robopac) at €9.5 billion turnover in 2024 with 80 percent exports is structurally consolidation-ready and is the single most actionable Italian industrial cluster for the next decade. HIGH.

Italian DOP food and specialty agriculture

Active sponsors include FSI (Casalasco tomato platform toward European aggregation), Clessidra Green Harvest (Laurieri bakery, first investment November 2025), Quadrivio (PROSIT wine), DeA Capital Alternative Funds Taste of Italy 2 (Alnut bolt-on), Wise Equity (pistachio leader December 2025, Marullo, Alba Milagro), Xenon (Solana), and Riello (specialty industrial yarns). The DOP economy at €20.7 billion value in 2024 with €5.15 billion in exports (up 12.7 percent) gives the sector both scale and export defensibility, and the FSI Casalasco roll-up thesis sets a credible template for further specialty-food consolidation (Great Italian Food Trade). HIGH.

Italian healthcare services and DSO

Active sponsors include Charme (Bianalisi diagnostics), Italmobiliare portfolio (CDS Casa della Salute, 26.8 percent perimeter growth), Aksia (Content Group CDMO sold to De Agostini), Alto Partners (healthcare focus), and Riello (healthcare focus). The Italian dental service organization consolidation thesis has not yet produced a named platform of US scale; Italian dental remains comparatively fragmented and may be one of the highest-opportunity LMM build-out themes for 2026 to 2028. GAP: no primary source surfaces a named Italian DSO platform with 2024 to 2026 PE backing comparable to Heartland Dental or MB2 in the US.

Italian renewable energy

Active sponsors include Ambienta (Wateralia continuation), F2i (Sorgenia, with Sixth Street co-invest replacing Asterion), EDF / Edison (USD 700 million-plus greenfield), Sonnedix (226 MW Italian PV), Encavis (265 MW PV), Sunprime with EIB and Natixis (€507 million 2026 programme), and HIG Capital (Enrogen, Mecaer Aviation Group). Italy’s FER X auction allocated 8.6 GW of wind and solar most recently and 7.69 GW of solar PV in a prior tranche; PPAs are now a structural Italian product (renewablesnow.com, PV Tech). HIGH.

Italian automotive aftermarket

Active sponsors include Investindustrial historically, Charme historically, and BC Partners. The Italian Tier 2 and Tier 3 automotive components base (Magneti Marelli, Brembo adjacencies, Pirelli) feeds a consolidation thesis but has been slowed by 2024 to 2025 OEM weakness. GAP: confidence is LOW for named 2024 to 2026 LMM platform builds in this vertical.

Italian fintech and payments

Active sponsors include FSI (TNB up to €1.2 billion from Azimut Libera Impresa), Bain Capital, TPG and CDP via Nexi consortium contests, and Permira historically (Nexi). PIR retail flows are a tailwind. NB Renaissance is the named Italian sponsor in Bending Spoons (consumer tech bordering on fintech-adjacent). HIGH.

Seven contrarian findings

  1. Italy PMI succession at 6.9 percent annual rate produces 310,000 ownership transitions per year on the 4.5 million enterprise base. Italy carries approximately 3x the enterprise density per capita of France or Germany; the succession dollar opportunity per PE fund of mid-market scale is larger in absolute terms than the headline 1 million PMI framing suggests (Firstonline, Bocconi). HIGH.
  2. PIR / Alternative PIR retail LP capital crowds the FTSE Italia PIR PMI eligible mid-cap segment and structurally compresses the PE arbitrage on small and mid-cap Italian listed targets. A PIR-eligible EGM-listed PMI trades at a roughly 0.5x to 1.0x EBITDA premium to a comparable non-PIR peer, making take-privates economically harder on Italian small caps than the headline 19 delistings in 2025 implies. Most 2025 delistings were sub-€50 million EV stubs without serious PIR retail support (financecommunity.it). MEDIUM.
  3. Charme V, if confirmed at the €700 million to €850 million size band Bloomberg flagged, would redirect €500 million-plus into Italian mid-cap. A confirmed Charme V would create a fourth pole alongside Wisequity VI (€400 million), Progressio IV (€335 million), and Clessidra CCP4 (€500 million target). Combined dry powder dedicated to Italian sub-€50 million EBITDA targets in that scenario crosses €1.7 billion for vintage 2024 to 2025, an all-time peak that mathematically tightens entry valuations (Bloomberg flag). GAP on Charme V verification.
  4. Italian banking foundations as LPs are structurally over-allocated to Italy versus cross-border by mission, not by performance. The Compagnia di San Paolo / Fondazione Cariplo joint programme explicitly combines resources to invest in PE and VC oriented to Italian regional development. Italian LMM sponsors face an inelastic LP who will continue to fund domestic vehicles even when cross-border European PE produces better risk-adjusted returns, keeping Italian dry powder structurally above what global LP demand would otherwise sustain (joint programme). HIGH.
  5. 2025 deal count peaked at 887 transactions even as fundraising fell 46 percent and capital deployed fell 22 percent. Italian sponsors are choosing to deploy smaller checks more frequently, a strategy consistent with the family-owned PMI succession opportunity but inconsistent with institutional LP demand for fewer scalable platforms. Italian LMM platforms transacted in 2025 will need aggressive bolt-on roll-ups to reach a credible exit scale (AIFI 2025). HIGH.
  6. Italian PEX tightening under the 2026 Budget Law (5 percent participation threshold or €500,000 investment minimum) raises the cost of exit on small minority stakes and selectively penalizes Italian Holding SRL stacks. Italian PE deal structures are likely to push toward larger blocks and away from syndicated club-deal partial sells, with second-order pressure on 2026 to 2027 exit pricing (Bird & Bird, We Wealth). HIGH.
  7. Golden Power 2025 to 2026 expansion to cloud, AI, semiconductors, and submarine cable now applies to PE Italian deals in those verticals, including all cross-border acquisitions of Italian PMI in adjacent supply chains. With 835+ filings by mid-2025 (+44.7 percent versus 2023), this is now a real deal-timing cost. The European Commission infringement procedure opened November 2025 against Italy’s banking sector Golden Power discretion may force 2026 to 2027 narrowing, but the operational impact for PE through 2026 is incremental friction, not relief (Fieldfisher, White & Case 2026, CELIS). HIGH.

Dry-powder mathematics: the Italian LMM capital stack at June 2026

A bottom-up tally of Italian LMM dry powder available for sub-€50 million EBITDA targets across the vintage 2024 to 2025 cohort produces a credible €1.5 billion to €2.3 billion range as of the date of this tracker. The components:

Summed across the strict LMM cluster (Wisequity VI, Progressio IV, Clessidra CCP4 plus Green Harvest, Ambienta Small Cap, Xenon VIII, Quadrivio II family) the available dry powder at June 2026 is approximately €1.5 billion to €2.0 billion. Add in the lower bracket of NB Renaissance III deployable into LMM and the figure pushes to €1.9 billion to €2.4 billion. If Charme V is confirmed at the Bloomberg-flagged €700 million to €850 million range, total Italian LMM dry powder for sub-€50 million EBITDA targets crosses €2.5 billion, marking a vintage 2024 to 2025 high water mark.

The structural implication: at approximately 110 to 150 transactions per year executed by this LMM cluster (a triangulation from BeBeez weekly roundups and AIFI sector breakdowns), deployment pacing implies the cluster has approximately 12 to 18 months of dry powder at current deployment rate. Sponsors will face pressure to either accelerate deployment (which tends to drive entry-multiple expansion at the margin) or to extend investment periods, which has implications for LP NAV and IRR. The 2025 average ticket compression to roughly €13 million per deal is partly explained by sponsors choosing the smaller-check strategy to preserve optionality on platform spend.

Workforce and LP dynamics

The Italian PE workforce as captured in AIFI member directories has grown roughly 15 percent across 2024 to 2026, with the strongest hiring at LMM specialists (Wise Equity, Nextalia, Quadrivio, Clessidra) and at international houses building Italian benches (Tikehau, Bridgepoint, L Catterton). The talent pool draws disproportionately from Bocconi, Politecnico di Milano, and LIUC (Castellanza), supplemented by returning Italian alumni from London-based mega-cap funds.

LP composition by category in 2024 (AIFI breakdown): pension funds and benefit schemes 17 percent of raise (€984 million), public sector 16 percent (€937 million), private fund of funds 10 percent (€577 million), banking foundations and family offices the residual block. Foreign LPs supplied 34 percent of the 2024 raise, materially weighted toward NB Renaissance, FSI second fund, and Investindustrial VIII. The 2025 fundraising compression hit foreign-LP-heavy vehicles most acutely. The Italian banking foundation block is the most resilient LP category through the cycle precisely because it is mission-driven rather than performance-driven.

Cross-border deal dynamics and the Italian sponsor co-invest pattern

Italian LMM sponsors operate a distinctive co-invest pattern with international houses, parastatal CDP / FSI capital, and Italian banking foundations. Three structural arrangements recur in the 2024 to 2026 record:

The cross-border deal volume into Italy in 2024 to 2026 was concentrated in three verticals: (a) renewable energy and infrastructure (Sonnedix 226 MW, Encavis 265 MW, EDF / Edison USD 700 million-plus, Sixth Street / Sorgenia), (b) luxury and consumer (HongShan into Golden Goose, Prada into Versace at €1.25 billion EV), and (c) take-private bids on Italian-listed mid-cap (Recordati €10.7 billion, BF €666.2 million). Industrial mid-cap cross-border bids were thinner than luxury or infra, reflecting Golden Power-driven friction on industrial supply-chain assets.

Seller-fit matrix

The table below maps Italian seller profiles to the sponsor cluster most likely to be the right fit, based on the 2024 to 2026 transaction record:

The practical seller framing: at €5 million to €30 million EBITDA the Italian LMM specialist cluster is structurally over-capitalized for the available deal flow in 2025 to 2026, which is the buy-side reason process tempo has accelerated. At €50 million-plus EBITDA international cover is real but slower because of Golden Power and PEX adjustments. Sellers should size process timelines accordingly: six to nine months for sub-€30 million EBITDA family-owned PMI, nine to twelve months for €30 million to €80 million platforms, twelve to eighteen months for take-private and cross-border above €100 million EBITDA.

2026 outlook and the H2 2026 calendar

The H2 2026 Italian PE calendar carries five tracked items that will materially shape the next data set:

  1. Recordati take-private close: the CVC consortium €10.7 billion bid launched May 2026 will clear or fail through H2 2026. A clean close would set a 2026 anchor disinvestment of approximately €5 billion at cost (CVC’s pre-bid 46.8 percent at fresh strike price), pulling the 2026 disinvestment headline well above 2025’s €4.661 billion and into a sponsor-favorable cycle.
  2. Charme V close: if Bloomberg’s flag of USD 700 million proves correct, a Charme V close in H2 2026 would mark the largest Italian LMM specialist fundraise of the cycle and would push aggregate sub-€50 million EBITDA dry powder above €2.5 billion. GAP on Charme V verification.
  3. Marcolin process resolution: the Marcolin (eyewear) process flagged by FT December 2024 with Kering and EssilorLuxottica as suitors is the largest Italian luxury industrial mid-cap exit in market. A 2026 H2 close would round out the Italian luxury exit window opened by Permira on Golden Goose and Prada on Versace.
  4. Golden Power EU infringement resolution: the European Commission infringement procedure opened November 2025 against Italian banking-sector Golden Power discretion sits in process. A 2026 H2 reform commitment by Italy would meaningfully change cross-border bank-sector M&A timing. Italian Treasury commentary as of June 2026 suggests targeted narrowing rather than wholesale rollback.
  5. EGM delisting cycle: 19 delistings in 2025 against 22 IPOs leaves a structurally negative net flow. We expect H2 2026 to maintain the negative trend with five to ten incremental delistings, mostly sub-€50 million EV stubs.

The structural call for H2 2026 to 2027: Italian LMM deal count holds or modestly extends the 2025 peak of 887 transactions, average ticket size remains compressed at €13 million to €18 million, fundraising recovers partially from the €3.570 billion 2025 low toward €5 billion to €6 billion (still below 2024), and disinvestment cycles up materially on the Recordati close. Italian LMM specialists continue to crowd the €5 million to €30 million EBITDA band, with bolt-on activity meaningfully accelerating as 2024 vintage platforms enter their second and third year of build-out.

Limitations and open verification items

The following items in the source research could not be verified to primary source within the time budget and are flagged for human follow-up:

  1. Charme V launch and final size: Bloomberg flagged a USD 700 million raise but the Charme press release and website still reference Charme IV (€850 million, 2021 vintage) as the current vehicle. Charme V vintage and final close size require direct manager confirmation. GAP.
  2. CDP Equity Plenisfer partnership activity: Plenisfer was not surfaced in 2024 to 2026 CDP press releases; the relationship may be via a third-party fund of funds. Requires direct check of Plenisfer Investments SGR website and CDP Equity portfolio page. GAP.
  3. Quaestio Capital Management Italy LMM activity 2024 to 2026: surfaced only as Atlante fund manager historically; no recent direct LMM fund vintages confirmed. GAP.
  4. DEA Capital (parent) versus DEA Capital Alternative Funds SGR: parent DEA Capital SpA continues to be De Agostini controlled and trades on EGM; only the alternative funds SGR was sold to Green Arrow Capital. Confirm DEA Capital SpA parent status post 2025. MEDIUM.
  5. NEIP IV fund (DEA Capital Alternative Funds): not surfaced as an active raise; “NEIP” historically refers to North East Italy Partners. Requires fund family register check. GAP.
  6. Italian DSO consolidation: no named Italian DSO platform with 2024 to 2026 PE backing identified. Confidence on this thesis as actionable for CT readers: LOW until a named sponsor is verified. GAP.
  7. Italian automotive aftermarket consolidation platforms: similar gap as DSO. No named 2024 to 2026 LMM platform surfaced. GAP.
  8. PE carry post 2024 Budget Law: confirmed at 26 percent substitute tax per Article 60 DL 50/2017, but a direct read of the 2025 and 2026 Budget Law texts for any amendment is recommended given the broader 2026 financial income tax tightening. MEDIUM.
  9. Sponsor names flagged but not surfaced with 2024 to 2026 specific deals: Banca Sistema Capital, Mediobanca SPAC adjacencies, Apulia Capital, Boscolo Capital Partners, BS Investimenti, Casillo Group, Centerbridge Italy, Eskatos Capital, Indigo Capital, Latteria Capital, Manelli & Partners, Montezemolo & Partners, Nuova Banca SGR, Opera SGR, Orienta Partners, Pinasco Italia, Siliconplay, Tages Capital (separate from Tages on Banca Sistema), Verusio Capital. Recommend a targeted second pass via AIFI member directory and BeBeez search by sponsor name. GAP.
  10. 2025 disinvestment €4.661 billion figure: reported by Teleborsa quoting AIFI as “4,661 milioni.” We read this as €4.661 billion based on consistency with a 19 percent year-on-year decline from the verified 2024 figure of €5.7 billion, but the wording in the original Italian AIFI press release should be cross-checked. MEDIUM.

Sources

Primary source URLs are embedded inline throughout the tracker. Headline references for the macro spine:

FAQ

Which Italian PE sponsors are most active in the lower middle market in 2024 to 2026?

Across 2024 to 2026 the most active Italian LMM specialists are Wise Equity (Wisequity VI €400 million, multiple B2B niche bolt-ons), NB Renaissance (Fund III approaching €1 billion target by March 2026), Ambienta SGR (Small Cap Strategy €500 million), Clessidra (CCP4 €270 million first close plus Green Harvest agrifood), Xenon Private Equity (Xenon VIII USD 551.6 million), Quadrivio Group (Made in Italy Fund II ~€500 million target), Nextalia SGR (€1.5 billion+ AUM), and Green Arrow Capital (combined €8 billion AUM after the DeA Capital Alternative Funds acquisition). FSI Capital (€2 billion fund) sits at the upper end of the LMM band into mid-cap with the Casalasco, TNB, and Missoni 2025 transactions.

What are typical EV/EBITDA multiples in the Italian LMM?

Italian LMM transactions under €100 million EV typically clear at 6x to 8x EBITDA. Platform transactions at €100 million to €500 million EV clear at 8x to 10x. Sector spread is wide: industrial niches at 6x to 8x; specialty food and luxury at 10x to 14x for branded leaders; software and SaaS at 10x to 12x. The eurozone mid-market median per Argos Wityu was 9.8x in Q4 2024, trending toward roughly 8.3x median through 2025.

How does the 2026 Italian Budget Law affect PE deal structures?

The 2026 Budget Law tightens the Participation Exemption (PEX) regime: capital gains qualify for the 95 percent IRES exemption only where the participation represents 5 percent of share capital or voting rights, or where the investment is worth at least €500,000. Italian Holding SRL stacks that previously held sub-5 percent positions for tax efficiency lose the shield unless the absolute threshold is met. Expect PE deal structures to push toward larger blocks and away from syndicated club-deal partial sells.

What is the Italian Golden Power regime and how does it affect PE deals?

Italian Golden Power is the foreign direct investment screening regime expanded in 2024 to 2025 to include cloud computing, data centres, artificial intelligence, advanced semiconductors, submarine cable networks, critical digital infrastructure, agricultural biotechnology, and food security technologies. Filings crossed 835 by mid-2025, up 44.7 percent versus 2023. The European Commission opened an infringement procedure in November 2025 against the Italian banking sector’s broad FDI discretion. For PE, Golden Power adds six to eight weeks of incremental clearance time on sensitive cross-border bids.

How many Italian PMI face succession over the next decade?

Bocconi and CERIF data put the annual PMI succession rate at 6.9 percent, which applied across the ISTAT 4.5 million-enterprise base produces approximately 310,000 ownership transitions per year, or 3.1 million across a decade. Narrowed to PMI with paid employees in the 1 to 250 employee bracket (approximately 950,000 firms), the ten-year cohort sits at 650,000 to 1 million succession events. Italy carries the deepest absolute SME succession pool in continental Europe.

Which Italian sponsors target the smallest tier (€3 million to €10 million EBITDA)?

The smallest tier is dominated by Riello Investimenti Partners (€3 million to €15 million EBITDA), Xenon Private Equity (€5 million to €25 million), Aksia Group (€5 million to €20 million), Alto Partners SGR (€5 million to €25 million), Progressio SGR (€5 million to €20 million), and Ambienta Small Cap Strategy at the lower end of its €5 million to €20 million range. Wise Equity and NB Renaissance both target €10 million-plus EBITDA businesses.

What is the Italian carry interest tax rate?

Italian carry interest is taxed at the 26 percent substitute tax rate as financial income, governed by Article 60 of Decree Law 50/2017, provided the managers commit at least 1 percent of fund capital and hold for at least five years. The headline 26 percent rate remained in place through 2024 to 2025 and is not changed by the broader 2026 financial income tax adjustments (crypto gains rise from 26 to 33 percent on January 1, 2026, but PE carry treatment is anchored to the 2017 framework).

How does Italian PE penetration compare to France?

Italian PE raised €5.3 billion in 2024 against France at €25.2 billion, a 4.8x differential. Of approximately 200,000 organized Italian companies with more than ten employees, fewer than 500 are listed, around 2,200 are PE owned, and 800 carry private debt. Italy is the largest absolute pool of family and founder-owned PMI in continental Europe paired with the lowest PE penetration rate per company among major European economies.

Which Italian sectors are most consolidation-ready for LMM PE in 2026 to 2028?

The most actionable Italian consolidation themes for LMM PE through 2028 are: (1) the Emilia Romagna packaging machinery cluster at €9.5 billion turnover and 80 percent export intensity; (2) Italian DOP food and specialty agriculture at €20.7 billion DOP economy value, particularly platform builds following the FSI / Casalasco template; (3) Italian dental services (currently absent named PE platform, the highest-opportunity unbuilt thesis); (4) Italian renewables and energy transition under FER X auctions; and (5) Made-in-Italy luxury and design at the €10 million to €30 million EBITDA scale where Quadrivio and Style Capital remain active.

What is the most contrarian finding in the 2024 to 2026 Italian PE data?

The 2025 deal-count peak (887 transactions, +21 percent versus 2024) alongside the 22 percent decline in capital deployed and the 46 percent fundraising compression. Italian sponsors are deploying smaller checks more frequently rather than larger checks less frequently. This is the precise opposite of the 2025 pan-European trend. The implication: Italian LMM platforms transacted in 2025 will need aggressive bolt-on roll-ups to reach a credible exit scale for 2028 to 2030 sponsor-to-sponsor or trade sales.

About the author

This tracker was authored by the CT Acquisitions research team. CT Acquisitions is a European mid-market M&A intermediary covering business owners across Italy, France, Iberia, the Nordics, the DACH region, the UK, and the United States. Our research division publishes country-specific PE buyer trackers and SME succession data sets used by sellers, advisors, and institutional LPs. For seller-side process design or buyer-side platform mapping, contact us via the CT Acquisitions client portal.

Last updated: June 17, 2026.