Context
Private capital is reallocating away from software-heavy strategies toward infrastructure and other "heavy" assets, according to a Bloomberg report published on March 23, 2026 (Bloomberg, Mar 23, 2026). The reorientation stems from two linked dynamics: a recalibration of software valuations after the AI-fueled rerating cycle and a renewed focus on predictable cash flows offered by real-assets such as energy, transportation, and utility infrastructure. Fund managers and limited partners are responding to both valuation and operational risk considerations; the trend manifests in fundraising flows, deal activity and secondary-market pricing. This piece synthesizes public reporting, market statistics, and Fazen Capital's proprietary perspective to place the shift in historical and portfolio-construction context.
The reallocation is not a wholesale exit from technology; rather, it is a strategic rotation. Private capital's exposure to tech-oriented platforms is being re-scoped toward industrial applications of AI—automation in manufacturing or energy optimization—rather than high-growth consumer software with stretched multiples. That recalibration is visible in deal mix: firms are targeting brownfield infrastructure and industrial automation assets where returns are more tied to contracted revenues or replacement cycles. Institutional investors are seeking refuge in assets with tangible collateral and inflation-linked revenue streams as central banks navigate sticky inflation and tighter-for-longer rates.
Several macro drivers have accelerated the move. First, public-market technology multiples have normalised since the early 2020s rerating, prompting a valuation reappraisal in private markets (Bloomberg, Mar 23, 2026). Second, geopolitical priorities—resilience of supply chains, energy transition and onshoring—have redirected capital to sectors that attract policy support and long-dated contracts. Third, the availability of debt financing for leveraged buyouts in heavy industries has improved as banks and non-bank lenders price risk differently from the software cycle. These structural factors together create a more permissive environment for heavy-asset private capital deployment.
Data Deep Dive
Quantifying the shift requires parsing fundraising data, deal counts and valuation trends. Bloomberg's March 23, 2026 article highlights the directional move, and third-party datasets corroborate it: according to PitchBook, private equity dry powder stood at approximately $1.6 trillion at end-2025, with an estimated 18% earmarked to infrastructure and real assets (PitchBook, 2026). Preqin data for 2025 show an increase in capital raised by infrastructure-focused funds, reported up c.22% year-over-year (Preqin, 2026). Those numbers imply a meaningful rotation of LP commitments toward funds that explicitly target heavy assets.
Valuation dynamics provide an important comparison. Bloomberg noted a sharp rerating of software multiples versus historical averages through 2024 and into 2025; private-market buyers have reacted by lowering entry multiples for pure software platforms (Bloomberg, Mar 23, 2026). By contrast, transaction pricing for brownfield infrastructure has been more resilient, supported by contracted cash flows and inflation-linked escalators. Relative to 2021 peaks in technology valuations, many software targets were trading at discounts of several dozen percentage points by mid-2025, prompting sponsors to seek asset classes where predictability offsets multiple compression.
Deal execution metrics also exhibit sectoral divergence. In 2025, deal completion times for energy and infrastructure assets shortened versus 2023-24, as sponsors capitalized on policy-driven investment windows and streamlined regulatory approvals in key jurisdictions (IEA, national announcements, 2024-25). Meanwhile, bolt-on and platform transactions in software have seen longer diligence and price renegotiation cycles, reflecting higher execution risk as buyers test product-market fit and AI-dependency. These operational frictions feed back into allocation decisions at the fund-raising stage.
Sector Implications
The shift toward heavy assets influences capital structure, return sourcing and operational playbooks for private capital firms. Infrastructure and energy assets typically carry higher upfront capital expenditures, longer leases or concession terms, and a greater reliance on regulated or contracted cash flows. As sponsors pivot, underwriting approaches emphasize technical due diligence, lifecycle capex forecasting and commodity-price sensitivity—skills that differ materially from those used in scaling SaaS platforms. Firms that can adapt their operating teams and integrate engineers, asset managers and project financiers will have a competitive edge.
Comparative return expectations are evolving too. Historically, software buyouts attracted higher headline IRR targets driven by revenue growth and multiple expansion; heavy assets trade more on yield, long-duration cash flows and lower terminal multiple risk. For institutional portfolios, this means a shift in correlation profiles: real assets typically offer lower beta to public equities and a different inflation-hedging characteristic versus growth software. Over a 10-year horizon, an allocation shift of even 5 percentage points from tech to infrastructure can materially reduce portfolio volatility and change expected cash return timing.
Peer-positioning and fundraising dynamics matter. Large funds with established infrastructure franchises have leveraged scale to take advantage of the reallocation: they reported oversubscriptions in 2025-26 vintages and increased commitments to energy transition strategies. Mid-market sponsors face a strategic choice—build capability in heavy assets or partner with specialist co-sponsors. The latter path can produce faster market entry but compresses economics; the former requires investment in human capital and longer time horizons to build a credible track record.
Risk Assessment
The rotation into heavy assets carries its own set of risks. Execution risk in brownfield and greenfield infrastructure includes construction delays, regulatory change, and commodity price exposure—risks that are often front-loaded and can create cash-flow volatility. Financing risk remains material: while credit availability improved for certain assets in late 2025, rising global rates increase the cost of capital and can compress leveraged returns if operating cash flows do not rebase as expected. Sponsors must model stressed rate scenarios and covenant headroom rather than rely on stable rate assumptions.
Another risk is the valuation re-rating of heavy assets if macro conditions deteriorate. If inflation recedes more rapidly than priced into long-term contracts, or if interest rates decline sharply, the present value profiles of long-dated yields could compress—creating mark-to-market downside. In addition, policy risk is non-trivial: changes in energy subsidies, infrastructure permitting regimes, or cross-border investment screening can reshape project economics. These contingencies require active monitoring and contingency planning within fund structures.
Finally, there is competitive risk. As more capital chases heavy assets, entry multiples could inflate, reducing the relative attraction versus earlier entry points seen in 2024-25. Sponsors that move late may face compressed forward returns, especially in higher-profile energy transition assets where many LPs seek ESG-aligned exposure. Active sourcing, technical differentiation, and selective geographies will be necessary to preserve return potential.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital views the current rotation not as a repudiation of technology but as a pragmatic rebalancing of private market exposures. Our analysis suggests that the optimal private-debt and equity allocations should be sensitivity-weighted to rate regimes, contract tenure and capex requirements rather than labelled by sector alone. For example, industrials deploying AI for process control combine the downside resilience of heavy assets with selective software upside—an area where hybrid strategies can capture attritional returns while managing multiple risk.
Contrarian insight: the most fertile originations in the coming 24 months may arise from stressed or repriced software-for-infrastructure carve-outs—assets where software platforms are nested within larger industrial franchises. Sponsors that can underwrite the industrial economics and isolate software optionality will likely find asymmetric returns. This perspective underscores why cross-domain diligence teams (engineers plus product specialists) will outperform purely sectoral groups.
Fazen also emphasizes the role of secondary markets as a source of differentiated exposure. Secondary transactions allow LPs to rebalance with price discovery that reflects current yield curves and operational data. In a market transitioning from growth multiple expansion to cash-flow orientation, secondary channels provide both liquidity and selective entry points into proven infrastructure portfolios.
Outlook
Over the next 12–36 months, we expect private capital flows to remain biased toward heavy assets relative to the early-2020s baseline, though not uniformly across all geographies or subsectors. Energy transition, telecommunications (fiber, tower shares), and transportation concessions are likely to continue attracting sizable commitments due to policy support and contracted revenues. However, cyclical heavy industries such as metals and mining will attract capital selectively, contingent on commodity cycles and sovereign policy clarity.
Technology will not disappear from private markets; instead, it will become more integrated into industrial strategies. Sponsors that can combine digital operational improvements with hard-asset cash flows will generate differentiated risk-adjusted returns. Institutional investors will demand clearer alignment between revenue structures and macro sensitivities—leading to more sophisticated LP reporting and covenant structures.
Finally, watch fundraising vintages and secondary pricing as near-term barometers. A persistent increase in infrastructure funds raised (Preqin: +22% YoY in 2025) and stable pricing in secondary transactions for core infrastructure will indicate continued investor appetite, whereas widening bid-ask spreads in secondary markets or a sudden influx of capital chasing headline transition assets could signal late-cycle dynamics.
Bottom Line
Private capital's rotation to heavy assets is a structural rebalancing driven by valuation reappraisal in software and the relative predictability of real assets; it presents both opportunities and execution risks that require specialized underwriting and active portfolio management. Monitor fundraising flows, secondary pricing and policy developments as real-time indicators of whether the rotation is durable.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
