Private equity is increasingly burdened by ‘zombie companies’

Zombie Companies

Private equity is increasingly burdened by ‘zombie companies‘ – firms that neither grow nor collapse, but linger in portfolios, draining resources and blocking exits.

In recent years, private equity has faced a troubling phenomenon: the rise of the zombie company.

These are businesses that generate just enough cash to service their debt but fail to deliver meaningful growth or attract buyers, even at discounted valuations.

They remain trapped on balance sheets long after the intended investment horizon, creating a drag on both investors and the wider economy.

The roots of this problem lie in shifting market conditions. Rising interest rates have made debt-heavy buyouts harder to sustain, while a slowdown in dealmaking has reduced opportunities for profitable exits.

Offloading?

In the past, firms could rely on buoyant markets to offload underperforming assets, but today’s cautious buyers are unwilling to take on companies with weak fundamentals.

As noted by a financial educationalist, Oliver GOTTSCHALG – ‘the machine is stuck’ – private equity firms cannot recycle capital efficiently.

For investors, the implications are stark. Capital is locked in funds that cannot distribute returns, potentially undermining confidence in the asset class.

Some firms have resorted to continuation vehicles or fee-generating strategies to keep operations afloat, but these are stopgaps rather than solutions.

The longer companies remain in this half-alive state, the more they consume scarce managerial attention and financial resources.

The persistence of zombie companies also raises broader concerns. They tie up capital that could otherwise support innovation and growth, while their stagnation risks eroding trust in private equity’s promise of dynamic value creation.

Unless market conditions improve or restructuring strategies succeed, the industry may face a decade defined not by bold exits, but by portfolios haunted by the undead.

In short, zombie companies symbolise private equity’s struggle to adapt, neither thriving nor dying but stubbornly refusing to leave

Zombie companies in private equity trap capital, reducing liquidity and investor confidence, which indirectly pressures public markets—especially high‑valuation sectors like AI.

When private equity funds are clogged with underperforming assets, institutional investors face tighter cash flows and may rebalance away from riskier equities.

This creates capital shortages and amplifies volatility in growth stocks. AI firms, already under scrutiny for sky‑high valuations, are particularly vulnerable: investors pull back when liquidity is constrained, leading to sharper corrections.

Recent sell‑offs saw AI stocks lose over $820 billion in value as confidence faltered, reflecting how private equity stagnation can ripple into tech markets.

Beware the Zombie!

The UK economy grew by just 0.1% in the third quarter of 2025, a figure that casts a shadow over the government’s upcoming Autumn Budget

UK Growth

The Office for National Statistics confirmed that GDP expanded by a mere 0.1% between July and September 2025, down from 0.3% in the previous quarter and below economists’ low expectations of 0.2%.

This ‘painstakingly low and feeble growth’ reflects weak consumer demand, faltering production, and persistent inflationary pressures.

For Chancellor Rachel Reeves, who will deliver her Budget on 26th November 2025, the numbers present a difficult backdrop. With unemployment edging higher and household finances under strain, calls for fiscal support are intensifying.

Yet speculation continues that Reeves will likely opt for tax rises to shore up public finances, a move that risks dampening already fragile growth.

The Bank of England may provide some relief if it cuts interest rates at its final meeting of the year, but monetary easing alone cannot offset structural weaknesses.

Business investment remains subdued, and September’s 2% drop in manufacturing output highlights the challenges facing industry. The JLR debacle didn’t help.

The Budget will therefore be a balancing act: stimulating growth without undermining fiscal credibility.

Today’s figures underline the urgency of that task.

Note:

Rachel Reeves’ 2024 Autumn Budget aimed to lay the groundwork for long-term growth, but it was not widely seen as a ‘growth budget’.

Many business leaders and analysts criticised it for dampening entrepreneurial momentum.

Reeves framed her first Budget as a reset for economic stability, following Labour’s July 2024 election win.

And here we are one year on from 2024 budget with virtually ZERO growth.

So, where now?