The Zombie Pattern: How Distressed Companies Drain Before They Fall
In private equity this year, a quiet crisis has a name: the zombie fund. These are vehicles that have lived ten, twelve, fifteen years past their intended maturity, still reporting net asset value but distributing almost nothing back to the investors who funded them. The numbers are no longer marginal. North America's zombie-fund AUM rose from $372 billion in 2021 to a record $441 billion in 2024, and more than 40% of limited partners now report exposure to at least one. By mid-2025, industry estimates put over $1 trillion of PE assets in a frozen, unsold state — capital that is technically "active" on paper but functionally dead in practice. To escape the freeze, sponsors have leaned on continuation vehicles: the GP-led secondary market grew to roughly $105 billion in 2025, with continuation funds making up about 84% of it. Europe-focused funds accounted for 29% of analyzed zombie exposure and Asia for 12%. Strip away the jargon and the structure is simple. A zombie doe...