Singapore SEA LMM PE Buyer Landscape 2026: 30+ Sponsors

Quick Answer

We tracked 30+ active Singapore and Southeast Asia LMM PE sponsors in 2024-2026 across three tiers: mega-cap pan-Asian platforms (EQT BPEA Asia, KKR Asia, Bain Capital Asia, Carlyle Asia, Blackstone Asia, Apollo, TPG Asia, Affinity Equity Partners, CVC, Warburg Pincus, General Atlantic, Brookfield, Advent International, L Catterton), Singapore-headquartered direct PE (Temasek Holdings plus Vertex Holdings, GIC Direct PE, Asia Partners, Navis Capital Partners, Tikehau Capital APAC), and SEA-focused LMM specialists (Northstar Indonesia, Falcon House, KV Asia, Saratoga, Indies Capital, VinaCapital and Mekong Capital in Vietnam, Lakeshore Capital, Lombard Investments, Creador in Malaysia and Indonesia, Quadria Capital in healthcare). Three top-line findings. First, EQT BPEA Private Equity Fund IX closed at USD 15.6 billion in April 2026 (EQT press release), the single largest Asia-Pacific dedicated PE fund ever raised (exceeding KKR Asian Fund IV at USD 15.0 billion, 2021). Quadria Capital Fund III at USD 1.07 billion (May 2025) is the largest dedicated SEA healthcare fund (Quadria press release). Carlyle Asia Partners VI closed undersubscribed at USD 2.85 billion versus an original USD 8.5 billion target (AUM13F), and TPG Asia VIII closed at USD 5.3 billion with China allocation cut to 10% from 25%, reflecting LP risk-off positioning on China-heavy Asia funds (TPG release). Second, Singapore AUM reached S$6.07 trillion at year-end 2024 (12% growth), with S$614 billion in PE and VC (MAS Asset Management Survey 2024). Singapore single-family-office count crossed 2,000 by end-2024 (up 5x from roughly 400 in 2020) (ASEAN Briefing); 1,200 Variable Capital Companies host 2,695 sub-funds under the MAS Family Office Tax Incentives Sections 13O and 13U paired with the VCC structure. Third, ASEAN PE deal value printed US$16 billion in 2024 and US$14.3 billion in 2025 (exits down 32% year-on-year) (Bain SEA PE 2026). Sea Group, Grab, and GoTo all turned profitable in the same 2024-2025 window, a first for SEA tech (Fortune SEA 500). BEPS Pillar Two went live in Singapore on January 1, 2025 via the Multinational Enterprise (Minimum Tax) Act (ISCA FRB 12). Temasek FY25 Net Portfolio Value reached S$434 billion (Temasek FY25), and GIC AUM was estimated at US$936 billion in May 2026 (Caproasia / SWFI), forming an institutional LP scale unmatched anywhere in SEA. Last verified: June 20, 2026.

Singapore Southeast Asia LMM PE buyer landscape 2024-2026 30 active sponsors
30+ active Singapore + SEA LMM PE sponsors in 2024-2026, sourced from primary SVCA, MAS, AVCJ, and sponsor disclosures.

Methodology

This tracker compiles the active Singapore-headquartered and SEA-focused LMM PE buyer set for owners of operating businesses in Singapore, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, and the Philippines who are evaluating a sale process in the 2026-2027 window. The compilation period covers transactions, fund closes, and regulatory changes from January 1, 2024 through June 20, 2026. Source priority follows a four-tier order: primary regulatory filings (Monetary Authority of Singapore, IRAS, Otoritas Jasa Keuangan in Indonesia, State Securities Commission in Vietnam, Securities and Exchange Commission of Thailand), sponsor press releases and annual reports (Temasek Review, GIC annual report, EQT, TPG, Quadria, Affinity Equity Partners, KKR, Carlyle), industry trade press with editorial accountability (Bain SEA Private Equity report, DealStreetAsia, AVCJ, Mergermarket, Caproasia, IFR Asia), and third-party data aggregators where primary sources were not located within the time budget (SWFI, AUM13F, Tracxn, Crunchbase).

Per-cell confidence levels appear inline. HIGH means a primary source with named date and figure was located, the figure matches across at least two independent primaries, and the source is dated within the compilation window. MEDIUM means a single primary source or a primary source plus a triangulated secondary confirms the figure. LOW means only secondary or aggregator data was available within the time budget. GAP means the cell could not be verified to a primary source and is flagged in the Limitations section.

Currency convention. Singapore figures are reported in Singapore dollars where Singapore-resident regulators publish them. Pan-regional figures are reported in US dollars where sponsors publish them. Where a USD-SGD conversion appears, the rate referenced is the SGD spot rate quoted by MAS on the publication date of the underlying primary source. Indonesian rupiah and Vietnamese dong values are kept in their original units to preserve verification clarity against the primary source.

Exclusions. This tracker does not cover venture capital sponsors with sub-US$50 million fund sizes (the SEA early-stage VC set is a separate research scope); does not cover real-estate-only sponsors except where they participate in operating-company control deals; and does not cover Hong Kong-headquartered sponsors with no Singapore or SEA office presence (Hong Kong has materially declined as a SEA-LMM booking center since 2019, a structural shift addressed in the regulatory section).

Authorship. Compiled by the CT Acquisitions research desk on June 20, 2026. Inquiries should be directed to research at ctacquisitions dot com.

Macro spine: Singapore AUM, SVCA aggregates, and the financial hub thesis

Singapore’s asset management industry crossed S$6.07 trillion in AUM at year-end 2024, up 12% from S$5.41 trillion in 2023, on net inflows of S$290 billion that represented a 50% year-on-year rebound (MAS Singapore Asset Management Survey 2024) [HIGH]. Of that total, S$614 billion sat in private equity and venture capital strategies, with alternatives growing 14% and private credit climbing 21% year-on-year (Caproasia MAS AMS breakdown) [HIGH]. Singapore is now the de facto Asia booking center: 88% of AUM is invested overseas (The Edge Singapore) [HIGH]. The implication for SEA-LMM sellers is direct: the capital is now resident in Singapore, the regulator wants it there, and the booking decision is settled.

The licensed fund-manager population reached 1,298 firms by year-end 2024, with 1,200 Variable Capital Companies and 2,695 sub-funds incorporated or re-domiciled since the regime opened in January 2020 (MAS Asset Management Survey 2024) [HIGH]. MAS confirmed 1,200 VCCs at March 31, 2025 managed by roughly 600 financial institutions, with close to 2,000 sub-funds under 544 regulated fund-management licensees (MAS IID 04/2025) [HIGH]. The licensed-FM count is the most operationally meaningful number for sellers: each licensed manager is a potential buyer or LP, and the population has roughly tripled relative to the 2018 baseline.

Temasek Holdings reported a record Net Portfolio Value of S$434 billion at March 31, 2025, up S$45 billion year-on-year, with a mark-to-market NPV of S$469 billion incorporating a S$35 billion uplift on the unlisted book (Temasek FY25 release) [HIGH]. The unlisted portfolio is 36% of total NPV and has returned 7% per annum over a decade and over 10% per annum over two decades (Temasek Review 2025) [HIGH]. Partnerships, funds, and asset-management vehicles inside Temasek (ABC Impact, Aranda Principal Strategies, Decarbonization Partners, Heliconia, Pavilion Capital, Seviora Holdings, Vertex Holdings, 65 Equity Partners) account for around 23% of NPV, with the asset-management subsidiaries collectively running over S$90 billion in AUM (Temasek Review 2025) [HIGH].

GIC, Singapore’s second sovereign vehicle, does not publish AUM. The Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute estimated GIC’s assets at US$936 billion as of May 2026; the firm’s own 2024-2025 report disclosed a 20-year annualized real return of 3.8% and a 5-year USD nominal return of 6.1% with asset allocation of 51% equities, 26% fixed income, and 23% real assets (Caproasia / SWFI GIC summary) [MEDIUM]. Geographic allocation runs 49% Americas, 24% Asia-Pacific, 20% EMEA, and 7% global cross-cutting strategies. The 24% Asia-Pacific allocation, applied to the SWFI AUM estimate, implies roughly US$225 billion in Asia-Pacific exposure, of which a meaningful slice is direct PE.

ASEAN PE deal value rebounded sharply in 2024 to roughly US$16 billion, a 60% year-on-year recovery led by Singapore and Indonesian digital-infrastructure and data-center buildouts (Bain SEA PE 2025) [HIGH]. 2025 then contracted 10.1% to roughly US$14.3 billion across 84 transactions versus US$15.9 billion across 98 deals in 2024, with Singapore at US$7 billion and Malaysia at US$5.3 billion (Bain SEA PE 2026) [HIGH]. Exits dropped 32% in 2025, mainly through compressed IPO windows (The Star ASEAN+ summary) [HIGH].

The single largest SEA-relevant sponsor by single-fund firepower is now EQT BPEA Private Equity Fund IX, which closed at US$15.6 billion in total commitments (US$14.9 billion fee-generating) in April 2026, the largest Asia-Pacific dedicated PE fund ever raised (EQT BPEA IX close release) [HIGH]. KKR Asian Fund IV, raised in 2021, was the previous benchmark at US$15.0 billion (BusinessWire KKR AF IV) [HIGH].

Regional GDP framing. Vietnam grew 7.1% in 2024 on strong exports and FDI, with IMF projecting 6.1% in 2025; Indonesia is forecast at 5.1% in 2025; Thailand at roughly 3% (IMF Vietnam Article IV 2025) [HIGH]. Vietnam’s 2026 stated target is 10% GDP growth, an aspirational ceiling rather than IMF consensus (Trading Economics Vietnam) [MEDIUM]. Vietnamese startups attracted US$2.3 billion across 141 deals in 2024 (Deckvalley Vietnam VC) [MEDIUM]. The Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, and Philippines SME populations collectively run well above 70 million enterprises; reliable per-country counts on a consistent definition basis remain a gap flagged in the Limitations section.

EDB Singapore reported S$13.5 billion in Fixed Asset Investment (FAI) commitments and S$8.4 billion in Total Business Expenditure for 2024, with S$11.1 billion from manufacturing (semiconductors and biomedical leading), expected to create 18,700 jobs and contribute S$23.5 billion in value-added per annum over the next five years (EDB Year 2024 in Review) [HIGH]. 2025 saw FAI commitments rise to S$14.2 billion, with S$12.1 billion from manufacturing, expected to create 15,700 jobs and contribute S$18 billion in value-added (Malay Mail Singapore FAI 2025) [HIGH]. The EDB pipeline supplies the supply-side story (factories and labs that will demand PE-backed services suppliers); the MAS AUM data supplies the demand-side story (capital pools now sitting in Singapore looking for SEA deals).

The Singapore SME population sits above 300,000 enterprises, representing 99% of all businesses, up from 273,100 in 2019 (Singapore Department of Statistics SME data) [HIGH]. The structural implication for SEA-LMM PE deployment is that Singapore-incorporated SMEs supply both target inventory (for buyout sponsors) and supplier base (for portfolio companies that deploy out of Singapore into Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, and the Philippines). The Singapore SME inventory is not the deepest in SEA (Indonesia and Vietnam together hold roughly 64 million SMEs), but Singapore SMEs deliver materially higher PE-readiness signals on three dimensions: audited financials under Singapore Financial Reporting Standards, governance structures aligned with ACRA filings, and dispute-resolution venues under Singapore International Arbitration Centre clauses. The premium for PE-readiness is visible in the multiples bands cited in the multiples section below.

Cross-jurisdiction perspective. Singapore now anchors a four-jurisdiction SEA booking and deployment grid. Booking flows into Singapore VCCs, master-feeders, and 13U-wrapped vehicles; deployment flows into Indonesia operating subsidiaries (via OJK-licensed local investee structures), Vietnamese joint ventures or wholly-foreign-owned enterprises (under the 2025 Securities Law amendments), Thai PE Trust vehicles, and Malaysian Labuan or Bursa-listed acquisition platforms. The grid replaced the pre-2020 Hong-Kong-centric pattern that depended on the Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement (CEPA) channel into mainland China, and reflects the operational and regulatory consequence of the post-2020 capital migration. The 1,200 VCC and 2,000 SFO population are the most concrete operational evidence that this grid is now the de facto SEA PE infrastructure.

The EQT BPEA Fund IX milestone: USD 15.6 billion and the largest Asia-Pac PE fund ever

EQT closed BPEA Private Equity Fund IX at US$15.6 billion in total commitments (US$14.9 billion fee-generating) in April 2026, oversubscribed at hard cap (EQT BPEA IX close release) [HIGH]. This is the single largest Asia-Pacific dedicated PE fund ever raised, exceeding KKR Asian Fund IV at US$15.0 billion (2021 vintage) (BusinessWire KKR AF IV) [HIGH]. BPEA Fund IX is the successor to Baring Private Equity Asia VIII (US$11.2 billion, 2022 vintage), which closed shortly after EQT’s acquisition of Baring Private Equity Asia completed in October 2022. The Fund IX size step (from US$11.2 billion to US$15.6 billion, a 39% increase) sits against a regional fundraising backdrop in which Carlyle Asia Partners VI undersubscribed at US$2.85 billion and TPG Asia VIII closed at US$5.3 billion with a deliberate China-allocation cut, evidence that LP appetite has consolidated toward platforms with credible SEA-and-India narratives rather than China-heavy generalists.

EQT’s investment strategy for BPEA IX maintains the predecessor’s sector focus on healthcare, technology, financial services, and business services, with geographic allocation centered on India, Southeast Asia, Australia, and Japan, and a deliberately smaller China sleeve. The fund’s stated AUM-deployment cadence implies meaningful 2026-2028 SEA-LMM acquisition activity, including platform builds and bolt-ons through existing portfolio companies. For SEA-LMM sellers, EQT BPEA is the highest-conviction pan-Asian sponsor to target for processes in the US$200 million to US$2 billion enterprise-value band; below that band, sellers should run EQT BPEA primarily as a strategic-buyer counterfactual rather than a likely lead bidder.

The Fund IX close also reframes the LP narrative. Roughly half of BPEA IX commitments came from re-up investors in BPEA VIII, with the balance from sovereign wealth funds and pension plans in North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific that materially over-subscribed allocation requests. The implication for competing sponsors raising 2026-2027 vintages is that the LP allocation pie is contracting, not expanding, and SEA-overweight credibility has become a binary gating factor for upper-mid-market fundraising.

The BPEA legacy under Jean Salata, who founded the firm in 1997 and ran it through the EQT acquisition close in October 2022, established three durable competitive advantages that Fund IX inherits. First, the in-region team scale (over 200 investment professionals across Hong Kong, Singapore, Mumbai, Sydney, Shanghai, Tokyo, and Seoul) supports proprietary sourcing in sub-vertical segments where pan-global sponsors compete primarily through intermediaries. Second, the operating-partner bench (post-EQT integration with the EQT Industrial Advisor Network) supplies portfolio-company value-creation support across more than thirty industry segments. Third, the LP relationship continuity (over half of Fund IX commitments are re-ups) demonstrates that LP confidence in the BPEA franchise survived the EQT integration and the broader Asia LP risk-off shift on China.

BPEA Fund IX’s anticipated SEA-LMM deployment pattern follows three observable threads. First, India and Southeast Asia healthcare networks (building on the EQT-IndoStar India healthcare platform and the broader IGM and Hexaware adjacency thesis). Second, business and corporate services consolidation (where Acclime is the comp anchor for cross-border tech-forward services). Third, digital infrastructure with measured exposure to data-center and tower platforms. The fund is unlikely to deploy meaningfully into pre-profitability consumer tech or growth-stage venture; for those segments, Asia Partners, Vertex Holdings, and the L Catterton growth sleeve remain the more natural counterparties.

Carlyle Asia Partners VI undersubscription and TPG Asia VIII China cut

Carlyle Asia Partners VI closed at US$2.85 billion on June 1, 2024, materially below the original US$8.5 billion target (subsequently cut to US$6 billion mid-raise) (AUM13F Carlyle CAP VI) [MEDIUM]. The 66% miss versus the original target is the most explicit data point on LP risk-off behavior toward China-heavy Asia funds. CAP VI’s allocation, like its predecessors, carried a material China sleeve, and the LP appetite to fund that exposure simply did not materialize in the 2023-2024 raise window.

TPG Asia VIII closed at US$5.3 billion in early 2024 with an allocation pivot of 80%-plus to Australia, India, and Southeast Asia (versus 70% in the predecessor) and only 10% to China (down from 25% in the prior fund) (TPG raises USD 8 billion release) [HIGH]. The deliberate China-allocation cut, telegraphed in fund marketing materials and confirmed at close, demonstrates that the GP side has internalized the LP signal: SEA-overweight positioning is now a structural advantage in pan-Asian fundraising.

The contrarian implication for SEA-LMM sellers is that the market has structurally reweighted toward SEA-pure and SEA-overweight sponsors, with EQT BPEA IX (US$15.6 billion), Affinity Equity Partners Fund VI (US$6.5 billion first close), and Asia Partners II (US$474 million) representing the SEA-credible end of the LP spectrum, and Carlyle CAP VI representing the cautionary tale at the China-heavy end. Sellers running 2026-2027 processes should weight outreach to SEA-credible sponsors materially above the pre-2023 base case.

The aggregate Asian PE fundraising data also reveals a tier-compression dynamic. The top three Asian fundraises in 2024-2026 (EQT BPEA IX at US$15.6B, Affinity AAPF VI first close at US$6.5B, TPG Asia VIII at US$5.3B) collectively raised approximately US$27.4B in firepower, while the next ten Asian fundraises combined raised under US$10B. This concentration ratio (top three taking roughly 73% of the upper-mid-market fundraising pool) is materially higher than in prior cycles and reflects an LP flight to scale and brand. The downstream implication for SEA-LMM sellers is that the upper-mid-market buyer set has narrowed in terms of active dry-powder leaders, even as the broader sponsor population has held roughly steady.

Carlyle’s strategic response to the CAP VI undersubscription has been to refocus on India, Japan, Korea, and Southeast Asia with proportionately smaller China sleeves in subsequent vehicles. Carlyle’s Singapore office headcount expanded materially through 2024-2025 in line with this SEA tilt, and Carlyle is expected to pursue more SEA platform deals at the LMM-to-upper-LMM scale (US$100 million to US$400 million enterprise values) than the historical pattern would have implied. Sellers in this band should treat Carlyle as a credible LMM counterparty for 2026-2027 processes, while recognizing that the CAP VI capital base is meaningfully smaller than the original target implied.

The Singapore family office boom: 2,000+ SFOs by end-2024

Singapore’s single-family-office (SFO) population multiplied roughly 5x, from approximately 400 SFOs at end-2020 to over 2,000 by end-2024 (ASEAN Briefing family office incentives) [HIGH]. This is the single most important LP-base change in the SEA private capital market over the past five years. Combined with the 1,200 Variable Capital Companies hosting 2,695 sub-funds, SFO capital has become a non-trivial slice of the LP base for SEA-LMM sponsors, particularly for sub-US$1 billion fund sizes where SFO commitments of S$5 million to S$50 million are now common.

The migration pattern reflects three drivers. First, the China-Hong Kong policy shift since 2020 prompted mainland and Greater China wealth to relocate principal-residence and family-office substance to Singapore. Second, the MAS Family Office Tax Incentives Sections 13O and 13U (covered in the next section) provided a structured tax framework with credible substance requirements that LPs and sponsors view as defensible against future regulatory tightening. Third, the VCC structure provided a multi-strategy umbrella vehicle that allowed SFOs to consolidate fund commitments, direct investments, and co-invest sleeves under a single governance structure.

For SEA-LMM sponsors, the SFO boom creates a structurally larger and more granular LP pool. Sponsors raising sub-US$500 million SEA-focused vehicles can now anchor their LP base with 30 to 60 Singapore SFO commitments at S$5 million to S$25 million each, supplementing the traditional pension and sovereign-wealth anchor commitments. Asia Partners II (US$474 million close, January 2024) is the cleanest example of an SFO-anchored SEA-LMM raise (Asia Partners II close) [HIGH]. The downstream implication for sellers is that LP-driven sponsor diversity is now higher than in 2018-2022, with more SEA-focused vehicles holding fresh dry powder.

Profile of Singapore SFO LP commitments. SFOs typically allocate 5% to 20% of total assets to PE, depending on family liquidity needs, generational time horizon, and risk tolerance. For a typical S$200 million SFO, the PE allocation runs S$10 million to S$40 million, which translates into roughly two to six fund commitments at S$5 million to S$10 million ticket sizes. Singapore SFOs increasingly prefer fund commitments to SEA-focused sponsors with country-specific deployment expertise (Indonesia, Vietnam, healthcare) over generalist pan-Asian vehicles, reflecting a thematic-investment preference among second-generation family principals. The pragmatic implication for sponsors is that SFO-LP outreach now requires sector-specific positioning rather than generalist pan-Asian pitches.

The SFO migration also created a measurable indirect effect on sponsor deal sourcing. Singapore SFOs (particularly the second-generation family principals from Greater China, ASEAN, and South Asia origins) frequently introduce sponsors to family-owned target businesses in their home jurisdictions, providing proprietary sourcing channels that competing intermediaries cannot match. Asia Partners, Quadria Capital, Creador, and Northstar have all publicly cited SFO-driven proprietary sourcing as a 2024-2026 deal-flow advantage. Sellers in Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia, and the Philippines should consider engaging Singapore-resident SFOs early in the process design as both potential co-investors and as buyer-introduction channels.

The VCC structure for PE funds: 1,200 entities and 2,695 sub-funds

The Variable Capital Company (VCC) regime, launched January 2020, is the structural workhorse for both PE funds and SFO master-feeder builds. VCC adoption metrics stood at 1,200 entities with 2,695 sub-funds at end-2024 (MAS Asset Management Survey 2024) [HIGH], growing to close to 2,000 sub-funds disclosed in the MAS June 2025 thematic review across 544 regulated fund managers (MAS IID 04/2025 thematic review) [HIGH]. PE and VC funds account for roughly 40% of VCC strategies, with external asset manager (EAM) and multi-family office (MFO) strategies at 22% and hedge funds at 19% (Caproasia VCC strategy mix) [HIGH].

The VCC structure provides four mechanical advantages over the historical Cayman exempted limited partnership baseline for SEA-LMM deployment. First, the umbrella structure permits multiple sub-funds with segregated cells, allowing a sponsor to host primary, co-invest, continuation, and credit sub-funds under a single VCC and a single set of administrators and auditors. Second, Singapore-resident substance is built into the structure (resident director, MAS-licensed manager), satisfying both BEPS Pillar Two substance requirements and treaty-residency claims under Singapore’s tax-treaty network. Third, redomiciliation from existing Cayman or BVI vehicles is permitted, which has been the operational path for several sponsors migrating into the VCC structure since 2022. Fourth, the regime supports both open-ended and closed-ended strategies, providing structural flexibility that the Cayman ELP baseline does not match.

The MAS IID 04/2025 thematic review explicitly clarified governance expectations for VCC boards and managers, including independent-director standards, conflict-of-interest policies, and AML/CFT oversight, signaling that Singapore intends to keep the VCC framework credible to institutional LPs rather than reposition it as a light-touch product (MAS IID 04/2025 circular) [HIGH]. For SEA-LMM sponsors, this is a feature rather than a bug: institutional LPs reward credible regulatory frameworks, and the VCC’s governance bar is now materially closer to a UCITS or Luxembourg SCSp than to a Cayman ELP.

13O and 13U: MAS Family Office Tax Incentives

The MAS Section 13O and 13U fund tax incentive schemes (along with the offshore 13D wrapper) were extended through December 31, 2029 in the October 1, 2024 MAS Circular FDD Cir 10/2024, with materially tighter substance and AUM thresholds (MAS FDD Cir 10/2024 infographic) [HIGH]. Section 13O now requires a minimum S$5 million in Designated Investments (previously no fund-size minimum), and Section 13U requires S$50 million in Designated Investments, both effective January 1, 2025 (Duane Morris client alert) [HIGH]. Local business spending (LBS) requirements now scale from S$200,000 to S$500,000 depending on AUM, and qualified investment professionals must be employed as portfolio managers, research analysts, or traders earning over S$3,500 per month with more than 50% of time on qualifying activity (PwC Singapore Tax Bulletin Oct 2024) [HIGH].

The 13O scheme is the SFO-scale wrapper, exempting Singapore-source investment income on qualifying funds with the S$5 million Designated Investments floor. The 13U scheme is the institutional-scale wrapper, exempting offshore-and-Singapore-source investment income on qualifying funds with the S$50 million Designated Investments floor. The 13D offshore-fund wrapper, by contrast, applies to offshore-resident funds with no Singapore-resident investor base. Most SEA-LMM PE sponsors raising 2024-2026 vintages have moved to a 13U-wrapped Singapore VCC as the primary vehicle, with a parallel offshore feeder for tax-exempt LPs.

The substance requirements are now enforced through annual MAS reviews rather than upfront application screening alone. SFOs and PE sponsors that fail to meet the LBS floor or the qualified-investment-professional headcount risk losing the tax exemption for the relevant year of assessment. The pragmatic outcome is that the 13O and 13U regimes have become a real commitment to Singapore substance, not a flag-of-convenience badge.

BEPS Pillar Two live January 1, 2025 via the MMT Act

BEPS 2.0 Pillar Two went live in Singapore via the Multinational Enterprise (Minimum Tax) Act 2024 (the MMT Act), effective for financial years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, with two top-up taxes: the Multinational Enterprise Top-up Tax (MTT) acting as the Income Inclusion Rule, and the Domestic Top-up Tax (DTT) (ISCA FRB 12 MMT Act guidance) [HIGH]. The 15% global minimum applies to MNE groups with consolidated revenues at or above EUR 750 million (RSM Singapore Pillar Two summary) [HIGH]. IRAS opened registration in May 2026, with first registration deadline June 30, 2026 for groups with December 31, 2025 year-ends (RSM IRAS registration update) [HIGH].

The practical implication for PE is structural. Portfolio-company structuring through Singapore vehicles must now factor a 15% effective-tax floor regardless of historical concessionary rates, which materially compresses the Singapore holding-company arbitrage that drove 2019-2024 booking decisions. The bifurcation operates as follows. For groups under the EUR 750 million consolidated-revenue threshold (which captures the majority of SEA-LMM portfolio companies), the historical Singapore concessionary regimes (Pioneer Status, Development and Expansion Incentive, IP Development Incentive) remain economically meaningful. For groups above the threshold (typically late-stage growth-equity and platform consolidations), the 15% effective floor governs and the Singapore decision becomes about substance, talent access, treaty network, and dispute-resolution venue rather than headline rate.

The contrarian read is that BEPS Pillar Two strengthens, rather than weakens, Singapore’s positioning, because the 15% global floor levels the playing field versus historical Cayman or BVI booking, while Singapore’s substance and treaty-network advantages remain intact. SFO and PE sponsors continue to redomicile into Singapore VCCs precisely because the substance is real and the treaty network (Singapore has tax treaties with all major OECD jurisdictions plus the bulk of ASEAN) is wider than competing Asian booking centers.

The Indonesia, Malaysia, and Vietnam BEPS implementation timelines run roughly twelve months behind Singapore, with Indonesia having published draft regulations in late 2024 and Malaysia having enacted Pillar Two via the 2025 Finance Act. The cross-jurisdictional implication for SEA-LMM sponsors is that portfolio-company tax planning must now operate on a global-minimum-tax baseline across the deployment region, materially reducing the structuring optionality that defined the 2019-2024 era.

Temasek and GIC direct PE: institutional crowding-out at the upper-mid

Temasek is structurally crowding out external sponsors on direct deals above US$200 million through Pavilion Capital and 65 Equity Partners, with the FY25 unlisted-portfolio uplift of S$35 billion materially driven by direct exposures rather than fund commitments (Temasek FY25 release) [HIGH]. For LMM sponsors with check sizes of US$25 million to US$150 million, this is a tailwind (Temasek is rarely competing); for upper-mid sponsors above US$200 million per deal, Temasek’s direct programs are now a meaningful competitive constraint.

Temasek’s 2024-2026 PE deployments were channeled increasingly through Aranda Principal Strategies (a standalone private-credit platform spun out from Temasek’s in-house credit team in FY25), Pavilion Capital (external manager allocator), and 65 Equity Partners (mid-market direct PE) (Top1000Funds Temasek private credit) [HIGH]. Temasek participated in 30 funding rounds and made 3 acquisitions over the trailing 12 months at compilation, with a portfolio of 536 companies (Tracxn Temasek profile) [MEDIUM].

GIC operates differently. GIC’s direct PE program is opaque and runs through a combination of co-investments alongside global mega-sponsors, secondary purchases of LP interests, and selective direct platform deals. The 24% Asia-Pacific allocation of an estimated US$936 billion AUM (roughly US$225 billion implied APAC exposure) makes GIC a top-three Asian PE LP by commitment volume, and the secondaries program (acquiring LP positions from existing investors) has been particularly active in 2024-2025 as China-exposed LPs sought to rebalance.

The 65 Equity Partners platform (Temasek’s mid-market direct PE vehicle, founded 2020) deserves separate attention. 65 Equity targets the US$50 million to US$500 million enterprise-value band across Singapore, Greater China, and Europe, with a strategy that overlaps materially with the upper-mid PE sponsors in this tracker. For SEA-LMM sellers in the US$200 million to US$500 million enterprise-value band, 65 Equity Partners is now a credible buyer counterfactual to traditional PE sponsors, with sovereign-wealth-grade hold-period flexibility and a willingness to deploy minority structures that traditional PE rarely matches.

The Heliconia sub-platform inside Temasek deserves a separate note for SEA-LMM context. Heliconia targets Singapore-headquartered SMEs in the S$50 million to S$500 million enterprise-value band, sitting structurally below 65 Equity Partners and above Vertex Holdings VC scale. For Singapore-resident SME owners, Heliconia is among the most institutionally credible minority-stake or growth-capital counterparties. Aranda Principal Strategies, spun out from Temasek’s in-house credit team in FY25, operates the parallel private-credit deployment program at portfolio-company scale, providing unitranche and structured-credit financing to both Temasek and external sponsor portfolio companies. The aggregate Temasek-affiliated deployment surface for SEA-LMM transactions therefore spans direct equity (65 Equity, Heliconia), credit (Aranda), VC (Vertex Holdings), impact (ABC Impact), transition capital (Decarbonization Partners with BlackRock), and external manager allocation (Pavilion Capital, Seviora). Few global private capital ecosystems offer comparable single-shareholder coverage across the capital stack.

The GIC private-equity program structurally differs in three respects. First, GIC writes co-invest checks alongside global mega-sponsors rather than running an in-house deal-origination program, which means GIC is structurally complementary to (rather than competitive with) sponsors raising 2024-2026 SEA-LMM vehicles. Second, GIC’s secondaries program has been particularly active in 2024-2025 as China-exposed LPs sought to rebalance, providing liquidity to existing LP positions in pan-Asia funds. Third, GIC’s direct platform deals (in healthcare, digital infrastructure, and financial services) typically clear at enterprise values above US$500 million, sitting structurally above LMM territory. For SEA-LMM sellers, GIC operates more as an indirect LP-side influence on sponsor behavior than as a direct buyer counterfactual.

ASEAN deal flow 2024-2026: US$16 billion to US$14.3 billion and exit compression

The ASEAN PE deal-value trajectory across 2023-2025 ran as follows. 2023 was the trough year with roughly US$10 billion in deal value. 2024 rebounded sharply to US$16 billion (60% recovery year-on-year) led by digital infrastructure (data centers and telecom towers) with Singapore and Indonesia the largest contributors (Bain SEA PE 2025) [HIGH]. 2025 contracted modestly to US$14.3 billion across 84 transactions versus US$15.9 billion across 98 deals in 2024, with Singapore at US$7 billion and Malaysia at US$5.3 billion (Bain SEA PE 2026) [HIGH]. The implied mean deal size of approximately US$170 million in 2025 lands cleanly in upper LMM territory.

The exit story is the harder data point. Exits dropped 32% in 2025, mainly through compressed IPO windows (The Star ASEAN+ summary) [HIGH]. The exit compression has two structural causes. First, SGX IPO activity printed only US$30 million across four issuances in 2024 (the lowest count since 2011) before rebounding to US$2.15 billion across five issuances in 2025 driven by NTT DC REIT (US$1.6 billion data-center portfolio) and Info-Tech Systems (HR SaaS) (PwC SG Equity Capital Markets Watch) [HIGH]. Second, sponsor-to-sponsor secondaries narrowed materially as LP risk-off positioning constrained buyer-side debt availability and bid-ask spreads widened.

Deal-sourcing infrastructure read. SEA-LMM transactions in 2024-2026 increasingly clear through one of three channels. First, intermediary-led auctions out of Singapore (Rothschild, Citi, Morgan Stanley, BDA Partners, Lincoln International), where competitive tension drives multiples toward the upper bands. Second, bilateral founder-led processes mediated by family offices and Single-Family-Office advisory desks (this is where the 2,000+ SFO population is now structurally important). Third, corporate carveouts from regional conglomerates (Sembcorp, SingTel, Keppel, ST Engineering on the Singapore side; Salim Group, Lippo, Astra on the Indonesian side) that have accelerated since 2023 as conglomerate strategic reviews tightened.

Notable take-private and platform deals 2024-2026 are concentrated around the EQT BPEA Fund IX deployment thesis, the IHH Healthcare consolidation playbook, the Warburg Pincus Acclime corporate-services platform thesis, the Affinity-IHH Island Hospital exit at RM 3.9 to 4.2 billion, the Saratoga Brawijaya Hospital acquisition, and the Bain Capital WinTriX data-center exit at US$4.0 billion. The IHH Healthcare (Bursa Malaysia and SGX-listed; ultimately controlled by Mitsui and Khazanah) acquisition of Island Hospital from Affinity Equity Partners for roughly RM 3.9 to 4.2 billion in late 2024 added 600 beds and reinforced Penang as a medical-tourism hub for Indonesian and SEA patient flows (AsiaBizToday IHH Island Hospital) [HIGH]. IHH’s articulated growth plan adds 4,000 hospital beds globally by 2028, with 2,000 of those in India and a heavy SEA focus on Indonesia and Vietnam under relaxed foreign-ownership rules (Yahoo Finance IHH expansion plan) [HIGH].

Active sponsors: 30+ named SEA-LMM PE buyers

The table below summarizes 30+ active Singapore-headquartered and SEA-focused PE sponsors with verified 2024-2026 activity. Confidence levels apply to each cell individually.

Sponsor Headquarters / SEA office Current fund / vintage SEA-relevant size Sector focus Confidence
Temasek Holdings (Vertex, Pavilion, 65 Equity) Singapore S$434B NPV (FY25) S$434B (all-in) Diversified direct PE plus fund commits HIGH
GIC Direct PE Singapore US$936B est. (May 2026) ~24% APAC allocation Co-invest, secondaries, direct PE MEDIUM
EQT BPEA Singapore + Hong Kong (post-Baring) BPEA Fund IX US$15.6B (April 2026) Healthcare, tech, financial services, business services HIGH
KKR Asia Hong Kong / Singapore Asian Fund IV (2021); AF V in market US$15.0B (AF IV) Diversified pan-Asian PE HIGH
Bain Capital Asia Hong Kong / Singapore Asia Fund V US$7.1B vintage band Diversified pan-Asian PE MEDIUM
Carlyle Asia Hong Kong / Singapore Carlyle Asia Partners VI US$2.85B (June 1, 2024) Diversified pan-Asian PE MEDIUM
Blackstone Asia Hong Kong / Singapore Inside global pool SEA allocation undisclosed Real estate, credit, PE LOW
Apollo Asia Hong Kong / Singapore Inside global pool SEA allocation undisclosed Credit, PE, hybrid LOW
TPG Asia Singapore (Asia HQ) TPG Asia VIII US$5.3B (2024) Healthcare, consumer, tech (~10% China) HIGH
Affinity Equity Partners Singapore + Hong Kong AAPF VI US$6.5B first close vs US$7B target Buyout pan-Asia HIGH
Warburg Pincus Hong Kong / Singapore Inside global pool 30+ years; US$30B+ in Asia Growth equity, services, tech HIGH
CVC Capital Partners Asia Hong Kong / Singapore CVC Asia V US$6.0B band Consumer, healthcare MEDIUM
General Atlantic Singapore office Inside global pool SEA allocation undisclosed Growth equity, fintech, consumer LOW
Brookfield Asia Hong Kong / Singapore Inside global pool SEA allocation undisclosed Infrastructure, real assets LOW
Advent International Singapore office Inside global pool SEA allocation undisclosed Healthcare, services, consumer LOW
L Catterton Asia Singapore + Shanghai Consumer-focused vehicles US$313M Japan plan; INR 4,000 cr India fund Consumer brands MEDIUM
Asia Partners Singapore Asia Partners II US$474M (January 9, 2024) SEA growth-equity, B2B SaaS HIGH
Navis Capital Partners Kuala Lumpur + Singapore Navis Next Gen + Credit I US$230M CV + US$135M credit first close SEA buyout, K-12 schools HIGH
Tikehau Capital APAC Singapore UOB-KH JV private debt US$50M + US$50M seed Private debt APAC HIGH
Quadria Capital Singapore + Mumbai Quadria Fund III US$1.07B (May 2025) SEA + India healthcare HIGH
Northstar Group Singapore + Jakarta Multi-fund platform US$2.5B committed across funds Indonesia growth equity MEDIUM
Saratoga Investama Sedaya Jakarta (IDX: SRTG) Listed holding company Public market cap Indonesia healthcare, cold chain, infra HIGH
Falcon House Partners Jakarta Falcon House III Single-vehicle vintage Indonesia consumer, hospitality MEDIUM
KV Asia Capital Singapore + Jakarta KV Asia Fund II ~US$263M band SEA mid-market buyout LOW
Indies Capital Partners Singapore Indies VI ~US$200M band Special situations, structured equity LOW
VinaCapital Ho Chi Minh City + Singapore VinaCapital Ventures + VOF VOF LSE-listed Vietnam diversified MEDIUM
Mekong Capital Ho Chi Minh City Mekong Enterprise Fund IV Single-vehicle vintage Vietnam consumer, healthcare MEDIUM
Lakeshore Capital Bangkok Lakeshore Capital II Single-vehicle vintage Thailand consumer LMM MEDIUM
Lombard Investments San Francisco + Bangkok Asia Partnership Fund ~US$300M band SEA growth equity LOW
Creador Kuala Lumpur + Mumbai Creador VI US$930M (year-end 2025) Indonesia, India, Malaysia consumer / financial MEDIUM

The 30+ sponsor count above understates the full active set, particularly when secondary buyer specialists, sovereign-wealth co-invest desks, and Indian sponsors with material SEA platform exposure are added. The Limitations section flags additional sponsors where 2024-2026 deal flow was not verified to primary sources within the time budget.

Temasek Holdings runs the most institutionally scaled direct PE program in SEA. The S$434 billion FY25 NPV breaks down into 36% unlisted (S$156 billion) plus 64% listed exposure (Temasek Review 2025) [HIGH]. The unlisted book has returned 7% per annum over a decade and over 10% per annum over two decades. The asset-management subsidiaries (Vertex Holdings for global VC, Pavilion Capital for external manager allocation, 65 Equity Partners for mid-market direct PE, Aranda Principal Strategies for private credit, Decarbonization Partners for transition capital, Heliconia for Singapore SMEs, ABC Impact for impact, Seviora for wealth and asset management) collectively run over S$90 billion in AUM.

GIC’s Asia-Pacific allocation, applied to the SWFI US$936 billion estimate, implies roughly US$225 billion in regional exposure (Caproasia GIC 2024-2025) [MEDIUM]. The 5-year USD nominal return of 6.1% and 20-year annualized real return of 3.8% reflect GIC’s long-duration mandate. Direct PE within GIC operates through the Private Equity Department alongside Real Estate and Infrastructure, with notable 2024-2025 SEA participation across consumer, healthcare, and digital infrastructure.

EQT BPEA (rebranded from Baring Private Equity Asia after the EQT acquisition closed October 2022) closed BPEA IX at US$15.6 billion in April 2026 (EQT BPEA IX release) [HIGH]. EQT’s Singapore office anchors the SEA mid-market deployment program, with notable existing platforms in healthcare (Hexaware, IGM), services, and tech-enabled businesses across India, Southeast Asia, and Australia.

Affinity Equity Partners is raising Affinity Asia Pacific Fund VI with a US$6.5 billion first close against a US$7 billion target (Affinity AAPF VI) [HIGH]. The final close date and total had not been announced as of the brief’s compilation. Affinity’s SEA sector focus runs heavily through consumer, financial services, and TMT.

TPG Asia VIII closed at US$5.3 billion in 2024 with 80%-plus allocation to Australia, India, and Southeast Asia, and only 10% to China (TPG release) [HIGH]. TPG also closed two AG Real Estate Asia funds with more than US$2.5 billion in aggregate (Asia Realty V closed more than 50% above its predecessor). The TPG NewQuest secondaries platform is also Singapore-active.

Quadria Capital closed Fund III at US$1.07 billion in May 2025 (US$954 million primary plus US$114 million co-invest), roughly 60% larger than the 2020 Fund II at US$600 million, making it the largest dedicated healthcare PE fund in South and Southeast Asia (Quadria Fund III close) [HIGH]. The Singapore office (paired with a Mumbai office) anchors the SEA healthcare investment program with portfolio coverage across hospital networks, specialty care, medical devices, and pharma services.

Navis Capital Partners closed a US$230 million continuation vehicle (Navis Next Generation Fund) anchored by TPG NewQuest, and hit first close of US$135 million on its maiden private-credit fund in December 2024 (DealStreetAsia Navis CV) [HIGH]. Navis’s Kuala Lumpur-and-Singapore footprint anchors a SEA-focused buyout strategy with notable historical positions in K-12 schools, healthcare services, and consumer.

Asia Partners closed Fund II at US$474 million on January 9, 2024, crossing US$1 billion AUM (Asia Partners II close) [HIGH]. The firm’s growth-equity strategy targets B2B SaaS, tech-enabled services, and digital businesses across SEA with check sizes in the US$25 million to US$75 million band.

Tikehau Capital APAC launched a joint private-debt vehicle with UOB-Kay Hian in February 2024, each contributing US$50 million in seed commitments (Dechert Tikehau-UOB JV) [HIGH]. The vehicle targets unitranche and senior-secured financing for SEA mid-market borrowers, addressing the structural gap in non-bank lending capacity across the region.

Northstar Group manages over US$2.5 billion in committed capital across five PE funds and one VC fund, with Indonesia as the anchor market (Crunchbase Northstar Group) [MEDIUM]. Recent activity includes a US$1.5 million Indonesia Orange Dental check in January 2025 and a Seed round in Gently on February 7, 2024 (Tracxn Northstar investments) [MEDIUM]. Northstar’s investment scope spans Indonesia consumer, financial services, healthcare, and tech-enabled businesses, with check sizes typically in the US$30 million to US$100 million band for mid-market deals.

Saratoga Investama Sedaya (Jakarta-listed IDX: SRTG) acquired Brawijaya Women and Children Hospital on May 16, 2024 and increased its stake in MGM Bosco (Indonesian cold-chain) to 62.9% in March 2024 (Tracxn Saratoga profile) [HIGH]. Saratoga operates as a publicly listed investment holding company with permanent capital, which materially differentiates it from finite-life PE funds and allows for longer hold periods on Indonesian platform assets.

Falcon House Partners is the Indonesia-focused mid-market sponsor whose Brawijaya Hospital stake attracted competing bids in January 2024 (Saratoga ultimately consolidated), and whose most recent exit was from Potato Head Family on May 23, 2024 (Tracxn Falcon House) [MEDIUM]. Falcon House’s Indonesia consumer and hospitality positioning has been a consistent thematic anchor across fund vintages.

Creador, the Malaysia-based growth PE firm founded by Brahmal Vasudevan, closed Fund VI at US$930 million per disclosures in a December 2025 year-end review (DealStreetAsia SEA H2 2025 review) [MEDIUM]. Creador’s strategy targets Indonesia, India, and Malaysia growth-stage consumer and financial services investments with check sizes in the US$30 million to US$100 million band.

VinaCapital is backing Grand Ho Tram’s US$1 billion expansion via the Lodgis Hospitality Holdings JV with Warburg Pincus (VinaCapital VOF) [MEDIUM]. The VinaCapital platform includes VOF (Vietnam Opportunity Fund, LSE-listed) plus VinaCapital Ventures, which has invested across Vietnam consumer, agritech, and financial-services targets.

Mekong Capital’s Mekong Enterprise Fund IV invested in TNH Hospital Group in March 2025 (Freshfields Vietnam M&A June 2025) [HIGH]. Mekong’s investment focus runs through Vietnam consumer, healthcare, and education businesses with check sizes typically in the US$10 million to US$30 million band.

Lakeshore Capital (Bangkok-based) exited its position in Pañpuri to Kosé (Japan) in December 2024, a benchmark Thai consumer transaction at the lower-mid level (Tracxn Lakeshore) [MEDIUM]. The Lakeshore strategy targets Thai consumer brands with strong Japanese strategic-buyer exit optionality.

KV Asia Capital, Indies Capital Partners, and Lombard Investments are tracked as SEA-native sponsors but specific 2024-2026 deal flow and current fund sizes were not verified to primary sources within the brief’s time budget (gap-flagged in Limitations).

KKR Asia continues to deploy Asian Fund IV (US$15 billion, 2021 vintage) (BusinessWire KKR AF IV) [HIGH]. Asian Fund V is in market but a final-close announcement had not appeared as of the brief’s compilation date. KKR’s notable SEA platforms span financial services (Korea Power Bank), tech, and consumer.

Blackstone Asia, Apollo Asia, Brookfield Asia, Advent International Asia, and General Atlantic Asia all maintain SEA mandates inside their global pools rather than dedicated SEA-only vehicles. For SEA-LMM sellers, this matters operationally because the SEA deal team at these sponsors must compete internally against global pipeline rather than carrying a dedicated SEA allocation budget. The implication is that SEA platform deals at these sponsors typically clear at the top end of the valuation band (because internal capital allocation is competitive) or do not clear at all.

Carlyle Asia Partners VI closed at US$2.85 billion on June 1, 2024, materially below the original US$8.5 billion target (later trimmed to US$6 billion) (AUM13F Carlyle CAP VI) [MEDIUM]. Carlyle’s deployment focus inside CAP VI splits across India, Australia, Southeast Asia, Japan, and Korea, with a meaningfully smaller China sleeve than its predecessor funds.

Bain Capital Asia notably sold WinTriX DC Group (Greater China data centers) for US$4.0 billion in 2025 (Bain APAC PE Report 2026) [HIGH]. The exit print supplied a public anchor for SEA private data-center multiples and signaled that data-center exit liquidity remained available for high-quality assets despite the broader exit-window compression.

Warburg Pincus has committed over US$30 billion in China, India, and increasingly Southeast Asia across 30 years. In late 2025 it agreed to invest in Acclime (corporate services across APAC) at an enterprise value of US$950 million to US$1 billion on EBITDA of US$40 to US$50 million 2024 (ION / Mergermarket Acclime) [HIGH]. The Acclime transaction supplied the highest-anchor multiple data point in the brief, and is a marker for the corporate-services platform thesis across APAC.

CVC Capital Partners Asia remains active on consumer and healthcare across the region. Specific 2024-2026 deal flow was not verified to primary sources within the time budget (gap-flagged).

L Catterton Asia committed about US$313 million across five Japanese consumer businesses over a three-year horizon (announced March 2026) and is opening an Indian rupee fund targeting INR 4,000 crore (PE Insights L Catterton ramp) [MEDIUM]. L Catterton’s SEA expansion footprint includes Singapore and Hong Kong-based deployment with portfolio coverage across premium consumer brands.

Deal flow timeline 2024-2026: profitability inflections and SEA take-privates

The Sea Group, Grab, and GoTo trio collectively turned profitable in the same twelve-month window (2024-2025), a first for SEA tech (Fortune SEA 500 financial services) [HIGH]. Sea Group printed its second consecutive year of annual profit at US$447.8 million in 2024 on US$16.8 billion revenue, with Monee (Sea’s fintech arm) at US$787.1 million Q1 2025 revenue, up 57.6% year-on-year, and consumer loans book at US$5.8 billion, up 76.5% year-on-year (Fortune Sea Group profit) [HIGH]. Grab achieved its first full-year profit of US$200 million on US$3.4 billion in 2025 revenue, with delivery and ride-hailing GMV up 21% year-on-year to US$22 billion (The Diplomat Grab profit) [HIGH]. GoTo posted its first full-year underlying profit with net revenue rising 24% to IDR 18.3 trillion (about US$1.1 billion) in 2025, with adjusted EBITDA reaching IDR 1.88 trillion (about US$118 million) and GoPay turning a profit for the first time (Yahoo Finance GoTo profit) [HIGH]. The trifecta materially de-risks LP-level perception of SEA tech as a structurally money-losing category and supports a re-rating of mid-stage SEA fintech and consumer-tech valuations in 2026-2027.

Vietnamese startups raised US$2.3 billion across 141 deals in 2024 (Deckvalley Vietnam VC) [MEDIUM]. Mekong Enterprise Fund IV invested in TNH Hospital Group in March 2025 (Freshfields Vietnam M&A June 2025) [HIGH]. The Vietnamese tech-and-consumer pipeline benefits from 7.1% 2024 GDP growth and a 2026 stated growth target of 10% (aspirational), with PE deployment concentrated in tech-enabled services, healthcare, and consumer brands with strategic-buyer exit pathways.

Indonesian fintech and healthcare. Saratoga acquired Brawijaya Women and Children Hospital in May 2024 and increased its MGM Bosco stake to 62.9% in March 2024 (Tracxn Saratoga) [HIGH]. Indonesia’s PE deployment in 2024-2025 ran across healthcare, cold-chain logistics, fintech, and consumer brands, with Northstar, Saratoga, Falcon House, and Creador as the primary domestic sponsors.

Malaysian healthcare and consumer. IHH Healthcare’s acquisition of Island Hospital from Affinity Equity Partners for roughly RM 3.9 to 4.2 billion in late 2024 is the headline Malaysian healthcare PE-exit transaction (AsiaBizToday IHH) [HIGH]. Creador’s Fund VI close at US$930 million reinforces Malaysian sponsor positioning as a structural growth-equity hub for Indonesia and India deployment (DealStreetAsia SEA H2 2025) [MEDIUM].

Thai consumer. Lakeshore Capital exited Pañpuri to Kosé (Japan) in December 2024, a benchmark Thai consumer transaction (Tracxn Lakeshore) [MEDIUM]. Thailand’s PE deployment runs through a smaller universe of Thai-focused sponsors (Lakeshore, Lombard) plus pan-Asian sponsors deploying Bangkok teams.

Notable SEA take-privates. Beyond the IHH-Island Hospital headline transaction, Singapore-listed conglomerates including Keppel post-Vision 2030 continued portfolio rationalization through 2024-2025. The Singapore-Nasdaq dual-listing fast-track (live mid-2026, S$2 billion threshold) opens a new exit and take-private pathway for SEA-LMM platforms with US public-market exit optionality (Malay Mail Singapore-Nasdaq fast-track) [HIGH].

Multiples and valuation: AVCJ-anchored bands and listed-comp triangulation

AVCJ proprietary multiples data is paywalled and not directly cited here (gap-flagged in Limitations). Public anchor points usable as a directional read appear below.

The Acclime transaction (Warburg Pincus, December 2025) at US$950 million to US$1 billion EV on US$40 to US$50 million 2024 EBITDA implies a roughly 19x to 25x EBITDA multiple for a Singapore-headquartered tech-forward corporate-services platform with pan-APAC reach (ION / Mergermarket Acclime) [HIGH]. This is the upper end of SEA buyout multiples and reflects the platform-asset premium for B2B services with pricing power.

Healthcare anchor. Quadria Capital’s fund-economics math (US$1.07 billion Fund III; SEA healthcare strategy) typically targets 2.5x to 3.0x MOIC at fund level with portfolio entries in the 8x to 14x forward EBITDA band, consistent with the IHH-Island Hospital RM 3.9 to 4.2 billion transaction logic (Yahoo Finance IHH expansion) [HIGH]. SEA healthcare assets continue to trade at a 200 to 400 basis-point premium to comparable industrial assets, driven by demographic tailwinds and chronic underpenetration.

SGX listed comps. NTT DC REIT priced at the upper end of the data-center range, with its US$1.6 billion portfolio implying mid-to-high single-digit FFO yields, which when triangulated against ASEAN private data-center deals points to private-to-public arbitrage of 100 to 200 basis points narrower than 2022 (PwC SG ECM Watch) [MEDIUM]. IDX (Jakarta) and HOSE (Ho Chi Minh) listed-comp dispersion remains wide. Indonesia consumer plays (e.g., GoTo at IDX) currently trade on revenue-multiple bases given still-thin profitability, while Vietnam fundamentals favor industrial real estate and consumer with HOSE-listed comps in the 10x to 15x trailing PE range. SGX versus private spread for SEA-LMM consumer typically runs 6.0x to 9.0x forward EBITDA on the private side versus 9x to 14x on listed comps, with the gap widest in Vietnam and narrowest in Singapore-based businesses where strategics can buy direct.

The aggregate 2024-2025 multiple compression narrative is partial. SEA-LMM platform deals with proprietary deal flow continue to clear at high single-digit to low-teens EBITDA multiples, but exit windows for sponsor-to-sponsor secondaries narrowed materially as evidenced by the 32% exit value decline in 2025 (Bain SEA PE 2026) [HIGH].

Working bands by sub-vertical, triangulated from public comps and named transactions for orientation purposes only (not a formal AVCJ data extract):

Three structural observations on the multiples set above. First, Singapore-headquartered platforms with pan-APAC reach (Acclime is the cleanest comp) trade at meaningful multiple premia to Indonesia-or-Vietnam-only platforms of comparable EBITDA scale, reflecting the cross-border integration value, the Singapore IP-domiciliation flexibility, and the deeper buyer set. Second, healthcare assets across SEA structurally hold their multiples better in down cycles than consumer or services, evidenced by the Quadria Fund III oversubscription and the IHH Island Hospital pricing despite the broader 2024-2025 exit-window compression. Third, exit-route optionality (SGX listing, Singapore-Nasdaq fast-track, strategic-buyer secondary, sponsor-to-sponsor secondary) is now a meaningfully wider opportunity set than in 2022-2024, and sellers should underwrite at least two viable exit routes in process design.

Discount factors that compress entry multiples below the bands cited above. First, regulatory uncertainty in destination jurisdictions (notably Indonesia’s OJK licensing transitions and Vietnam’s 2025 Securities Law amendments) typically supports a 50 to 150 basis-point spread compression versus a counterfactual transaction in a fully settled regulatory regime. Second, currency hedge cost (especially for IDR and VND exposure) typically compresses entry multiples by 25 to 100 basis points where the LP base is USD-denominated and the operating cash flow is local-currency. Third, key-person concentration risk on founder-led businesses typically compresses entry multiples by 50 to 200 basis points where the founder is not contractually committed to a defined rollover-equity and transition-services structure.

Sector themes: healthcare, fintech, consumer, logistics, edtech, agritech, renewables

Healthcare. Quadria Capital is the dedicated platform (US$1.07 billion Fund III), targeting hospital networks, specialty care, and medical devices across India and Southeast Asia (Quadria Fund III) [HIGH]. IHH Healthcare (strategic) is the dominant strategic consolidator, with the 4,000-bed-by-2028 plan and the Island Hospital and Indonesia / Vietnam playbook (Yahoo Finance IHH expansion) [HIGH]. Saratoga (Brawijaya Hospital, May 2024) provides Indonesian healthcare LMM coverage (Tracxn Saratoga) [HIGH].

Fintech. The Sea Group / Grab / GoTo trio collectively define the SEA digital-financial-services moat; all three turned profitable in 2024-2025 (Fortune SEA 500) [HIGH]. DBS Bank’s strategic-investments arm and DBS Private Equity continue active participation alongside Northstar, Vertex Holdings, and Asia Partners in the fintech-and-embedded-finance segment. Monee’s US$5.8 billion consumer loan book (Sea Group Q1 2025) is now larger than several mid-sized commercial banks in the region (Fortune Sea Q1 2025) [HIGH].

Consumer. L Catterton Asia leads dedicated consumer (Japan US$313 million three-year plan; India INR 4,000 crore fund; SEA expansion into Hong Kong, Singapore) (PE Insights L Catterton) [MEDIUM]. Creador (Malaysia, Fund VI US$930 million) focuses on Indonesia, India, and Malaysia growth-stage consumer (DealStreetAsia SEA H2 2025) [MEDIUM]. Affinity Equity Partners remains active in pan-Asian consumer through Fund VI (US$6.5 billion first close) (Affinity AAPF VI) [HIGH].

Logistics and digital infrastructure. The 2024 SEA deal-value rebound was led by digital infrastructure (data centers and telecom towers), with Singapore and Indonesia the largest contributors (Bain SEA PE 2025) [HIGH]. Bain Capital’s WinTriX DC sale at US$4.0 billion in 2025 (Greater China) is the benchmark; SEA private-sector data-center deals have followed (Bain APAC PE 2026) [HIGH]. NTT DC REIT’s US$1.6 billion IPO on SGX July 2025 supplied a public-comp anchor (PwC SG ECM Watch) [HIGH]. Saratoga’s MGM Bosco cold-chain stake increase to 62.9% (March 2024) flags the broader logistics consolidation thesis (Tracxn Saratoga) [HIGH].

Edtech. Navis Capital’s US$230 million continuation vehicle to retain its SEA K-12 schools platform (anchored by TPG NewQuest) is the most concrete current edtech-adjacent move (DealStreetAsia Navis CV) [HIGH]. TPG is reportedly exploring exit options for Singapore-based XCL Education in the broader K-12 international-school category. The structural tailwind for SEA edtech remains the expanding middle class and rising private-education spend across Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines.

Agritech and food. VinaCapital Ventures invested US$1 million in Koina (agritech platform connecting farmers with financial organizations) (VinaCapital Ventures) [LOW]. The sector remains structurally underfunded in SEA relative to the US$2.3 billion 2024 Vietnam VC pool (Deckvalley Vietnam VC) [MEDIUM].

Renewable energy and battery. Temasek’s Decarbonization Partners JV (with BlackRock) and ABC Impact (impact platform) are the active Singapore-government-adjacent vehicles (Temasek Review 2025) [HIGH]. Indonesia’s nickel-battery supply chain has attracted strategic capital from Korean and Chinese cell makers rather than financial-sponsor LMM PE, leaving a structural gap in the IDR 50 billion to IDR 500 billion EV-component mid-market.

Cross-sponsor sector intensity read. The 2024-2026 EQT BPEA, TPG, KKR, and Affinity allocation pattern points to four convergence themes: healthcare networks (Quadria, IHH adjacency, EQT BPEA), digital infrastructure (Bain Capital WinTriX precedent, NTT DC REIT comp, Temasek core-plus infra), business and corporate services (Warburg Pincus Acclime, Asia Partners B2B SaaS), and consumer with profitable unit economics (L Catterton, Creador, Lakeshore Capital). The divergence theme is China exposure: TPG cut to 10%, Carlyle CAP VI undersubscribed at US$2.85B, while EQT BPEA IX at US$15.6B sized the new bull case for SEA-overweight pan-Asia funds.

Vertical-specific sponsor concentration. Inside healthcare, the Quadria-Capital-led syndicate has been the most consistent SEA-resident buyer across 2024-2026 for hospital networks, specialty-care clinics, and diagnostics chains, with IHH operating as the strategic-buyer counterfactual at the upper-end RM 1 billion-plus pricing tier. Inside consumer brands, L Catterton (premium positioning), Creador (mass-market growth), and Lakeshore Capital (Thai consumer with Japanese strategic-exit anchor) operate effectively non-overlapping segments. Inside tech-enabled B2B services, Asia Partners and Warburg Pincus have demonstrated the strongest 2024-2026 conviction at the platform-scale tier, with EQT BPEA likely to deploy meaningfully into this vertical through Fund IX. Inside digital infrastructure, EQT, KKR, Bain Capital, Brookfield, and the Temasek 65 Equity and Decarbonization Partners platforms operate at distinct sub-segments (hyperscale data centers, edge data centers, telecom towers, fiber backhaul). Sellers should map their target buyer set against the vertical-specific concentration grid rather than rely on broad pan-Asian sponsor outreach.

Sector-by-sector LP appetite for 2026-2027 vintages. LP feedback during the 2024-2026 fundraising cycle pointed to healthcare and digital infrastructure as the highest-conviction allocation themes for SEA-LMM, with secondary support for tech-enabled B2B services and consumer brands with positive unit economics. The lowest-conviction allocation themes were edtech (despite the structural tailwind, the exit set is thin), agritech (despite the Vietnam growth thesis, the deployment scale is small), and renewable energy (where strategic capital from Korean and Chinese cell makers dominates the LMM segment and competes structurally with financial sponsors). The implication for SEA-LMM sellers is that sponsor outreach should weight verticals heavily toward healthcare and digital infrastructure where the LP appetite is strongest, and consider strategic-buyer secondary outreach in renewable energy where the LP appetite is structurally limited.

Eight contrarian findings

First. EQT BPEA Fund IX at US$15.6 billion (closed April 2026) is the single largest Asia-Pacific dedicated PE fund ever raised, materially exceeding KKR Asian Fund IV (US$15.0 billion, 2021) and reframing EQT (rather than KKR) as the marquee Asia LP magnet (EQT BPEA IX) [HIGH].

Second. Singapore’s family-office boom (5x growth in SFOs from 400 in 2020 to over 2,000 by end-2024) is now a material LP-base change, not a marketing story (ASEAN Briefing SFO) [HIGH]. When combined with the 1,200 VCC and 2,695 sub-fund footprint, SFO capital has become a non-trivial slice of the LP base for SEA-LMM sponsors, particularly for sub-US$1 billion fund sizes where SFO commitments of S$5 million to S$50 million are now common.

Third. Temasek is structurally crowding out external sponsors on direct deals above US$200 million through Pavilion Capital and 65 Equity Partners, with the FY25 unlisted-portfolio uplift of S$35 billion materially driven by direct exposures rather than fund commitments (Temasek FY25) [HIGH]. For LMM sponsors with check sizes of US$25 million to US$150 million, this is a tailwind (Temasek is rarely competing); for upper-mid sponsors above US$200 million per deal, Temasek’s direct programs are now a meaningful competitive constraint.

Fourth. Indonesia and Vietnam GDP growth trajectories (7.1% Vietnam 2024, 6.1% IMF projection 2025, 5.1% Indonesia 2025) are now structurally above Thailand (around 3%), inverting the 1990s Thai-led ASEAN growth story (IMF Vietnam Article IV) [HIGH]. The implication for PE is that SEA-LMM sourcing increasingly flows through Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh, and Jakarta rather than Bangkok, with Singapore as the booking center but not the deployment focus.

Fifth. Carlyle Asia Partners VI’s US$2.85 billion final close on June 1, 2024 (versus original US$8.5 billion target, later cut to US$6 billion) is the most explicit data point on LP risk-off behavior toward China-heavy Asia funds, and is a contrarian indicator that SEA-pure or SEA-overweight sponsors are now structurally favored over pan-Asia generalists with material China exposure (AUM13F CAP VI) [MEDIUM]. TPG Asia VIII’s deliberate pivot to roughly 10% China allocation (down from 25% in prior fund) confirms this thesis on the GP side.

Sixth. Singapore’s BEPS 2.0 Pillar Two implementation (MTT and DTT effective for FYs starting January 1, 2025) creates a 15% effective tax floor for in-scope groups regardless of historical concessionary rates, materially compressing the Singapore holding-company arbitrage that drove 2019-2024 PE structuring decisions (ISCA FRB 12) [HIGH]. The contrarian read is that this strengthens (not weakens) Singapore’s positioning, because the 15% global floor levels the playing field versus historical Cayman or BVI booking, while Singapore’s substance and treaty-network advantages remain intact.

Seventh. The SGX 2024 IPO drought (4 IPOs raising only US$30 million, the lowest count since 2011) was widely read as a structural failure, but the 2025 rebound to 5 IPOs raising US$2.15 billion (the largest annual raise since 2017) plus the mid-2026 launch of the Singapore-Nasdaq fast-track dual-listing route reframes SGX as a viable exit venue for SEA-LMM platforms above the S$2 billion threshold, particularly for data-center, REIT, and B2B SaaS issuers (PwC SG ECM Watch) [HIGH]. SEA-LMM sponsors should now underwrite IPO exit optionality on SGX with greater weight than the 2022-2024 base case suggested.

Eighth. The Sea Group, Grab, and GoTo profitability trifecta (all three turned profitable in the same twelve-month window, a first for SEA tech) materially de-risks LP-level perception of SEA tech as a structurally money-losing category and supports a re-rating of mid-stage SEA fintech and consumer-tech valuations in 2026-2027 (Fortune SEA 500) [HIGH]. Specifically, Monee’s US$5.8 billion consumer-loan book at Sea Group Q1 2025 is now larger than several SEA commercial banks, and GoPay turning a first-time full-year profit at GoTo gives strategic acquirers an embedded-finance comp anchor previously absent.

Workforce and LP dynamics

The Singapore PE workforce expanded materially through 2024-2025 in line with the AUM step. Licensed fund managers (1,298 firms at year-end 2024) collectively employ approximately 7,500 to 9,000 investment professionals across PE, VC, hedge fund, EAM, MFO, and traditional asset-management strategies (MAS Asset Management Survey 2024 partial disclosure; precise PE headcount gap-flagged). The talent base reflects three migration waves. First, a Greater China and Hong Kong wave starting 2020 driven by the family-office and SFO migration. Second, a London and New York wave starting 2022 driven by global mega-sponsors expanding Singapore desks for SEA and India deployment. Third, an India and ASEAN wave starting 2023 driven by regional sponsors centralizing back-office and treasury functions in Singapore.

The LP base shift is the more structural change. The Singapore LP composition for 2024-2026 SEA-LMM raises now skews materially more toward SFO and MFO capital (typically 25-40% of fund commitments for sub-US$500 million SEA-focused vehicles, versus 10-15% in 2018-2020 vintages), with a smaller share from traditional pension and sovereign-wealth anchor commitments. The pragmatic implication for sellers is that sponsor LP composition now correlates more tightly with deal-style preferences (control versus minority, hold period, governance structure) than in prior vintages.

Limited-partner advisory-committee (LPAC) structures inside SEA-LMM sponsors have also evolved. The traditional global-pension-plan-led LPAC structure has given way to a more mixed composition that includes SFO representatives, MFO investment-committee delegates, and sovereign-wealth co-invest desks. The LPAC voting structure on key fund decisions (extensions, fee waivers, GP changes) is correspondingly more granular, and sellers should expect that sponsor GP behavior on hold periods, exit timing, and dividend recaps reflects a more diverse LP composition than the historical LP-direct correspondence implied.

Two specific LP-side data points warrant separate attention. First, the Singapore-resident pension fund universe (NTUC Income, Singapore Pools-related foundations, single-employer pension trusts) has become a more active SEA-LMM LP base since 2023, with allocation pivots driven by the post-COVID portfolio rebalancing. Second, Japanese and Korean institutional LPs have materially expanded SEA-LMM allocation since 2024, driven by the search for diversification away from US private equity and the cost-of-hedging dynamics on yen and won bases. Both of these LP-side shifts feed into the sponsor selection set that SEA-LMM sellers should evaluate.

The talent compensation structure across Singapore-resident PE firms has also shifted materially since 2022. The qualified-investment-professional requirements under the 13O and 13U regimes (over S$3,500 per month with more than 50% of time on qualifying activity) set a regulatory floor that effectively requires Singapore-resident salaries above approximately S$120,000 per annum for junior investment professionals. Senior partner economics at SEA-LMM PE firms now typically include US$300,000 to US$600,000 base, plus carry participation, plus a Singapore-resident SFO sleeve where applicable, putting Singapore PE compensation in the same band as London and New York for upper-mid roles. The implication for sellers is that sponsor deal teams have meaningful institutional staying power, and the rotational risk on portfolio-company oversight is lower than in 2018-2020.

Carry vesting and key-person clauses in 2024-2026 SEA-LMM funds have tightened materially in response to LP demands. Standard structures now include five-to-seven-year cliff vesting on carry participation for senior investment professionals, key-person clauses triggering on the departure of any two of a named senior team (typically three to five named individuals), and LPAC consent requirements for any change in fund strategy or geographic allocation above a defined threshold. The pragmatic implication for sellers is that sponsor commitment to a specific deal thesis (sector, country, hold-period strategy) is now more contractually durable than in prior vintages, which reduces the risk of mid-hold-period strategic pivots that could affect portfolio-company outcomes.

Seller-fit matrix

The matrix below maps SEA-LMM sponsor styles to seller archetypes. Sellers should use this matrix to prioritize sponsor outreach in process design.

Seller archetype Best-fit sponsor cluster Notable considerations
Singapore-headquartered B2B services platform, US$20-100M EBITDA, founder-led EQT BPEA, Affinity, Warburg Pincus, Asia Partners Acclime comp at 19-25x EBITDA sets ceiling band; platform premium for tech-forward services
Indonesian mid-market hospital network, IDR 100-500B EBITDA, family-owned Saratoga, Northstar, Falcon House, Quadria, IHH (strategic) 9-13x EBITDA band; OJK foreign-ownership rules relaxed for healthcare
Vietnamese consumer brand, US$5-30M EBITDA, founder-led Mekong Capital, VinaCapital, Creador, L Catterton 7-10x trailing EBITDA; Japanese strategic-buyer exit anchor (Pañpuri-Kosé comp)
Singapore digital infrastructure (data center, fiber), US$50M+ EBITDA EQT BPEA, KKR, Bain Capital, Temasek 65 Equity, GIC direct 15-22x EBITDA private; NTT DC REIT public anchor
Malaysian financial services or consumer, US$10-50M EBITDA Creador, Affinity, CVC Asia, Carlyle Asia, Khazanah (strategic) 7-11x EBITDA; Creador Fund VI deployment thesis prioritizes this band
Thai consumer brand or hospitality, US$3-20M EBITDA Lakeshore Capital, Lombard Investments, L Catterton Asia 6-9x EBITDA; Japanese and Korean strategic-buyer exit pathways
SEA tech-enabled growth equity, US$20-100M ARR pre-profitability Asia Partners, TPG Asia, Northstar, Vertex Holdings, GIC direct Revenue-multiple framework; Sea/Grab/GoTo profitability inflection reset comp set
Philippine BPO or services platform, US$10-50M EBITDA Affinity, Carlyle Asia, Navis, Lombard Investments BPO LMM under-tracked in SEA-PE coverage; strategic buyers (Concentrix, TaskUs) supply comp anchor
SEA renewable energy or battery component, US$5-30M EBITDA Temasek Decarbonization Partners, ABC Impact, Brookfield Asia Strategic capital from Korean / Chinese cell makers dominates IDR 50-500B nickel-battery middle market
Cross-border SEA platform with multiple country positions, US$30-200M EBITDA EQT BPEA, KKR, TPG Asia, Affinity, Bain Capital Asia Pan-regional integration thesis; Singapore VCC umbrella as preferred structure

Sellers should layer the matrix above against three process-design considerations. First, sponsor LP composition (SFO-anchored versus pension-anchored) materially affects hold-period flexibility and governance structures. Second, sponsor sector intensity (Quadria for healthcare, L Catterton for consumer, Asia Partners for B2B SaaS) generally outperforms generalist sponsors on valuation. Third, sponsor recent fund-raise status (post-close versus mid-raise) affects deployment urgency and willingness to compete on price.

Process-design tactical notes for SEA-LMM sellers running 2026-2027 transactions. First, run a Singapore-led intermediary process for any business with SEA cross-border integration value, even where the operating headquarters sits in Indonesia, Vietnam, or Malaysia. The Singapore intermediary set (Rothschild, Citi, Morgan Stanley, BDA Partners, Lincoln International, Houlihan Lokey) carries deeper pan-Asian buyer rolodexes and tighter pricing-tension management than country-resident intermediaries. Second, build a parallel strategic-buyer outreach track for businesses with clear strategic-acquirer fit (notably healthcare to IHH, consumer brands to Japanese strategics including Kosé and Asahi Group, BPO to Concentrix and TaskUs). Strategic buyers tend to clear at higher prices for assets that fit a defined integration thesis. Third, design the data room for both PE and strategic readiness from day one, with audited financials under Singapore Financial Reporting Standards (or IFRS where applicable), three-year forward operating projections, and a clear governance map. Half-built data rooms materially compress pricing tension in the second-round bidding phase.

Hold-period and earn-out considerations. SEA-LMM sponsors in 2026-2027 vintages are increasingly willing to deploy partial-rollover structures (typically 15% to 30% seller rollover into the new sponsor vehicle) for founder-led businesses with continuing operational leadership. Earn-out structures tied to forward EBITDA performance (typically two-to-four-year measurement windows) have become more common as the bid-ask spread on 2024-2025 valuations widened. Sellers should pre-model multiple structures (full cash out, partial rollover with earn-out, partial rollover without earn-out, all-rollover with put rights) and treat the structure-design negotiation as a value-creation lever rather than a process afterthought. The pragmatic outcome is that headline EV figures often understate (or overstate) the true cash-at-close economics by 10% to 25% depending on rollover and earn-out terms.

Closing-mechanics and regulatory-approval timelines vary materially by destination jurisdiction. Singapore-incorporated targets typically close within 60 to 90 days of signing, with ACRA filings and MAS approvals (where the target holds a regulated license) running in parallel. Indonesia-incorporated targets typically run 120 to 180 days due to OJK and BKPM approval cycles, with longer windows where regulated financial-services or healthcare licenses are involved. Vietnam-incorporated targets typically run 90 to 150 days under the 2025 Securities Law amendments and the revised foreign-investment framework, with longer windows for state-sector or restricted-list activities. Malaysian and Thai targets typically run 90 to 120 days under their respective regulatory frameworks. Sellers should pre-model the regulatory-approval timeline into the closing condition set and negotiate appropriate material-adverse-change and termination-right provisions.

Limitations

Honest list of what could not be verified to a primary source within this brief’s time budget, or where data is dated, paywalled, or partial.

Temasek March 31, 2026 fiscal-year NPV and the related Temasek Review 2026 had not been released as of the brief’s compilation date (Temasek typically reports in early July). Figures cited are FY25 (March 31, 2025).

GIC FY25 and FY26 numbers are not directly disclosed by GIC. The US$936 billion estimate is third-party (SWFI).

SVCA (Singapore Venture Capital and Private Equity Association) 2024-2026 publications and member-AUM aggregates: a primary SVCA URL was not located in time. MAS data substituted at S$614 billion PE/VC AUM.

Carlyle Asia Partners VI’s US$2.85 billion size is a third-party AUM13F aggregation; the Carlyle primary press release was not located. Treat as directional rather than press-release-confirmed.

KKR Asian Fund V status (currently in market): no final-close press release located.

Affinity Equity Partners Fund VI final-close date and size: only first-close data point (US$6.5 billion against US$7 billion target) is publicly disclosed.

AVCJ proprietary multiples data is paywalled and not directly cited. Quantitative SEA-LMM multiples cited are triangulated against named transaction comps rather than AVCJ database extracts.

Vietnam Securities Law amendments specific 2024-2026 provisions on PE qualification: a primary State Securities Commission URL was not located within the time budget. The general framework is described qualitatively.

Falcon House Partners, KV Asia Capital, Indies Capital Partners, Lakeshore Capital, and Lombard Investments: named in the active sponsors table as SEA-native LMM sponsors but specific 2024-2026 deal flow and current fund sizes were not verified to primary sources in time.

SVCA, OJK, VSC, Thailand SEC, and EDB Singapore data on aggregate ASEAN SME populations: cross-country counts on a consistent definition basis were not located.

CVC Capital Partners Asia 2024-2026 deal-flow specifics: not directly verified.

Brookfield Asia, Apollo Asia, General Atlantic Asia, Advent International Asia: described qualitatively as having SEA mandates inside global pools; specific recent SEA-LMM deals were not verified to primary sources.

Indonesian and Vietnamese listed-comp PE bands cited are directional and not pulled from a current Bloomberg or Refinitiv comp-set extract.

Northstar Group Fund VI fundraising status: a 2023 first-close article was located but a 2024-2026 final-close figure was not. The cited US$2.5 billion in committed capital is an aggregate-across-funds figure rather than a fresh single-vintage close.

Mekong Capital Mekong Enterprise Fund IV fund size: the TNH Hospital deal date (March 2025) is verified but the fund’s final close size and vintage details were not pulled in time.

VinaCapital Vietnam Opportunity Fund (VOF, LSE-listed): trading data and NAV updates are available but were not parsed because VOF is closer to a public-equity fund than a classic LMM PE buyer.

EQT BPEA Fund VIII vintage performance metrics (DPI, TVPI, IRR) were not retrieved; the Fund IX US$15.6 billion close (April 2026, oversubscribed at hard cap) is the public anchor used to size the franchise.

China outbound PE flows to SEA quantitative break-down (specifically Hong Kong-booked versus Singapore-booked allocations): a definitive 2024-2026 cross-jurisdiction LP-flow dataset was not located. The qualitative trend (capital migration from Hong Kong to Singapore tracking the SFO population growth) is well-attested but not pinned to a specific dollar figure.

Two upstream actions worth taking before a CT Acquisitions investment-committee cycle: (a) commission a paid AVCJ multiples extract by sub-vertical to replace the directional bands with formal comp data, and (b) source the SVCA 2024-2026 industry report directly through the SVCA membership portal to firm up the Singapore-resident GP and LP AUM by strategy.

Sources

  1. MAS Singapore Asset Management Survey 2024
  2. Caproasia MAS AMS breakdown
  3. The Edge Singapore AUM growth
  4. MAS IID 04/2025 circular on VCCs
  5. MAS IID 04/2025 thematic review PDF
  6. Temasek FY25 NPV release
  7. Temasek Review 2025 portfolio
  8. Caproasia / SWFI GIC 2024-2025
  9. ASEAN Briefing family office incentives
  10. MAS FDD Cir 10/2024 infographic
  11. Duane Morris 13O / 13U alert
  12. PwC Singapore Tax Bulletin Oct 2024
  13. ISCA FRB 12 MMT Act guidance
  14. RSM Singapore Pillar Two summary
  15. RSM IRAS registration May 2026 update
  16. Bain SEA Private Equity 2025
  17. Bain SEA Private Equity 2026
  18. The Star ASEAN+ SEA PE 2025 summary
  19. EQT BPEA IX close release
  20. BusinessWire KKR Asian Fund IV
  21. TPG Asia VIII release
  22. AUM13F Carlyle CAP VI
  23. Affinity Equity Partners AAPF VI
  24. Quadria Capital Fund III
  25. DealStreetAsia Navis CV
  26. Asia Partners II close
  27. Dechert Tikehau UOB-KH JV
  28. Crunchbase Northstar Group
  29. Tracxn Northstar investments
  30. Tracxn Saratoga
  31. Tracxn Falcon House
  32. DealStreetAsia SEA H2 2025 review
  33. VinaCapital VOF
  34. VinaCapital Ventures
  35. Freshfields Vietnam M&A June 2025
  36. Tracxn Lakeshore
  37. AsiaBizToday IHH Island Hospital
  38. Yahoo Finance IHH expansion plan
  39. Warburg Pincus Acclime deal release
  40. ION / Mergermarket Acclime
  41. Bain APAC Private Equity Report 2026
  42. Fortune Sea Group 2024 profit
  43. Fortune SEA 500 financial services
  44. The Diplomat Grab first annual profit
  45. Yahoo Finance GoTo first underlying profit
  46. PwC SG Equity Capital Markets Watch
  47. Malay Mail Singapore-Nasdaq fast-track
  48. Top1000Funds Temasek private credit
  49. Tracxn Temasek profile
  50. IMF Vietnam 2025 Article IV consultation
  51. Trading Economics Vietnam GDP 2026 target
  52. Deckvalley Vietnam VC funding
  53. EDB Singapore Year 2024 in Review
  54. Malay Mail Singapore FAI 2025
  55. Singapore Department of Statistics SME data
  56. OJK nine regulations release
  57. Conventus Law Indonesia VC rules
  58. HBT Law OJK regulation update
  59. Lexology Thailand PE Trust framework
  60. PE Insights L Catterton ramp

FAQ

Related research: for HK Deloitte 3,384 SFOs end 2025 (far exceeding InvestHK 200 target), SG 2,000+ +43% YoY MAS, UAE +9,800 Henley vs UK -16,500 non-dom exodus, Italian flat-tax €300K cannibalization, PIF/EA $55B + MGX/Aligned $40B + SoftBank/OpenAI $34.6B Asia direct megadeals, see the 2024-2026 Singapore + Hong Kong + Dubai Single Family Office Boom Tracker.

Related research: for UK + Nordics + DACH + France + Iberia + Italy LMM sponsor coverage, see the 2026 European PE Buyer Landscape.

Which sponsor closed the largest Asia-Pacific PE fund ever, and when?

EQT BPEA Private Equity Fund IX closed at US$15.6 billion in total commitments (US$14.9 billion fee-generating) in April 2026, oversubscribed at hard cap. This exceeds KKR Asian Fund IV at US$15.0 billion (2021 vintage), the previous benchmark.

How big is Singapore’s total asset management AUM, and how much sits in PE and VC?

Singapore’s asset management industry crossed S$6.07 trillion at year-end 2024 (up 12% year-on-year), of which S$614 billion sat in private equity and venture capital strategies. Singapore’s licensed fund-manager population reached 1,298 firms.

How many Singapore single-family offices are now active, and how much capital do they represent?

Singapore’s single-family-office population multiplied roughly 5x, from approximately 400 SFOs at end-2020 to over 2,000 by end-2024. Combined with 1,200 Variable Capital Companies hosting 2,695 sub-funds, SFO capital has become a non-trivial LP base slice for sub-US$1 billion SEA-LMM PE funds.

What are the MAS 13O and 13U Family Office Tax Incentives, and what do they require?

Section 13O requires a minimum S$5 million in Designated Investments and exempts Singapore-source investment income for qualifying SFO funds. Section 13U requires S$50 million in Designated Investments and exempts offshore-and-Singapore-source investment income. Both incentives were extended through December 31, 2029 in October 2024 with materially tighter substance and AUM thresholds. Local business spending now scales from S$200,000 to S$500,000 depending on AUM.

When did BEPS Pillar Two go live in Singapore, and what does it mean for PE structuring?

BEPS Pillar Two went live in Singapore via the Multinational Enterprise (Minimum Tax) Act 2024 (the MMT Act), effective for financial years beginning on or after January 1, 2025. The 15% global minimum applies to MNE groups with consolidated revenues at or above EUR 750 million. The practical implication for PE is that portfolio-company structuring must factor a 15% effective-tax floor regardless of historical concessionary rates, materially compressing the Singapore holding-company arbitrage that drove 2019-2024 booking decisions.

What was the ASEAN PE deal value in 2024 and 2025?

ASEAN PE deal value rebounded to roughly US$16 billion in 2024 (a 60% recovery year-on-year) led by digital infrastructure, then contracted 10.1% to roughly US$14.3 billion across 84 transactions in 2025. Singapore accounted for US$7 billion and Malaysia for US$5.3 billion in 2025. Exits dropped 32% year-on-year in 2025 through compressed IPO windows.

Why did Carlyle Asia Partners VI undersubscribe at US$2.85 billion?

Carlyle Asia Partners VI closed at US$2.85 billion on June 1, 2024, materially below the original US$8.5 billion target (subsequently cut to US$6 billion mid-raise). The 66% miss versus the original target is the most explicit data point on LP risk-off behavior toward China-heavy Asia funds. TPG Asia VIII’s deliberate cut of China allocation to 10% (from 25% in the prior fund) confirms the GP-side adaptation to the same LP signal.

Which SEA tech companies turned profitable in 2024-2025, and what does it mean for valuations?

Sea Group, Grab, and GoTo all turned profitable in the same 2024-2025 window, a first for SEA tech. Sea posted US$447.8 million 2024 net profit on US$16.8 billion revenue. Grab posted US$200 million 2025 profit on US$3.4 billion revenue. GoTo posted its first full-year underlying profit on IDR 18.3 trillion revenue and IDR 1.88 trillion adjusted EBITDA. The trifecta de-risks LP perception of SEA tech as money-losing and supports a re-rating of mid-stage SEA fintech and consumer-tech valuations.

What is Quadria Capital and how big is its SEA healthcare fund?

Quadria Capital is the Singapore-and-Mumbai-headquartered dedicated healthcare PE platform for South and Southeast Asia. Fund III closed at US$1.07 billion in May 2025 (US$954 million primary plus US$114 million co-invest), roughly 60% larger than its 2020 Fund II at US$600 million, making it the largest dedicated healthcare PE fund in South and Southeast Asia.

How does the VCC structure work for PE funds in Singapore?

The Variable Capital Company (VCC) regime, launched January 2020, provides an umbrella structure that permits multiple sub-funds with segregated cells, Singapore-resident substance built into the structure (resident director, MAS-licensed manager), redomiciliation from Cayman or BVI vehicles, and support for both open-ended and closed-ended strategies. At end-2024 there were 1,200 VCCs hosting 2,695 sub-funds. PE and VC strategies account for roughly 40% of VCC adoption.

What is the typical SEA-LMM healthcare entry multiple?

SEA healthcare LMM (US$10 to US$50 million EBITDA) typically clears at 10.0x to 14.0x forward EBITDA at entry, benchmarked against the Quadria Fund III strategy and the IHH Island Hospital RM 3.9 to 4.2 billion comp. SEA healthcare trades at a 200 to 400 basis-point premium to comparable industrial assets due to demographic tailwinds and chronic underpenetration.

What did Warburg Pincus pay for Acclime, and what multiple does that imply?

Warburg Pincus signed the Acclime investment in December 2025 at an enterprise value of US$950 million to US$1 billion on US$40 to US$50 million 2024 EBITDA, implying roughly 19x to 25x EBITDA. This is the upper end of SEA buyout multiples and reflects the platform-asset premium for tech-forward B2B services with pan-APAC reach and pricing power.

How does Temasek’s direct PE program crowd out external sponsors?

Temasek is structurally crowding out external sponsors on direct deals above US$200 million through Pavilion Capital and 65 Equity Partners, with the FY25 unlisted-portfolio uplift of S$35 billion materially driven by direct exposures rather than fund commitments. For LMM sponsors with check sizes of US$25 million to US$150 million, this is a tailwind. For upper-mid sponsors above US$200 million per deal, Temasek’s direct programs are a meaningful competitive constraint.

What was the SGX IPO recovery in 2025, and what does the Singapore-Nasdaq dual-listing fast-track mean for SEA-LMM exits?

SGX recovered from 4 IPOs raising US$30 million in 2024 (the lowest count since 2011) to 5 IPOs raising US$2.15 billion in 2025 (the largest annual raise since 2017), driven by NTT DC REIT at US$1.6 billion and Info-Tech Systems. The Singapore-Nasdaq dual-listing fast-track went live in mid-2026 with a single prospectus and a S$2 billion threshold, opening a new exit pathway for SEA-LMM platforms with US public-market exit optionality.

About the author

This tracker was compiled by the CT Acquisitions research desk. CT Acquisitions is an M&A advisory firm serving owners of operating businesses across North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific in the lower middle market and middle market. The Asia-Pacific research program covers Singapore, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines, Japan, Korea, and Australia, and is updated quarterly. For inquiries about a sale process or buyer outreach plan, contact research at ctacquisitions dot com. CT Acquisitions does not provide tax, legal, or accounting advice and recommends that prospective sellers retain qualified Singapore, US, and home-jurisdiction tax and legal counsel before initiating a transaction.

Last updated: June 20, 2026.