Private Business Commentary
Editorial analysis of the private business sector, 33 million enterprises that collectively represent one of the largest and least visible components of American wealth.
Private business equity reached $15.5T in Q3 2025, a vast, largely invisible wealth pool
The Hidden Wealth of America
When we discuss wealth in America, the conversation gravitates toward stock markets, real estate, and retirement accounts. But private business equity (estimated at $18 trillion or more) represents a vast, largely invisible pool of wealth. These are the local businesses, professional practices, franchises, and family enterprises that employ roughly half of all American workers.
Unlike publicly traded companies with transparent market valuations, private businesses are valued only when they are sold, borrowed against, or reported in surveys. This opacity means that private business wealth is simultaneously one of the largest and least precisely measured components of household net worth.
Valuation: The Perpetual Challenge
What is a dentist's practice worth? A regional trucking company? A chain of three dry cleaners? These questions are answered differently by the IRS, the owner's divorce attorney, a potential buyer, and a bank considering a loan. The absence of a market-clearing price means that private business wealth exists in a state of permanent ambiguity.
This valuation uncertainty has real consequences. Business owners may overestimate their wealth when planning for retirement, underestimate it when paying estate taxes, or find that the value they have built over decades cannot be easily converted to cash when they need it.
The Succession Crisis
An estimated 10 million baby boomer-owned businesses will change hands over the next decade. Many of these owners have spent decades building enterprises that are deeply dependent on their personal relationships, expertise, and daily involvement. The challenge is not just finding a buyer, it is transferring the intangible value that makes the business work.
Only about 30% of family businesses survive the transition to the second generation. The failure rate reflects not just management challenges but also the difficulty of splitting business equity among heirs, funding estate taxes, and maintaining relationships with employees and customers through ownership changes.
Private Equity and Venture Capital
The institutional private market has grown dramatically. Private equity firms hold over $2.6 trillion in dry powder (committed but undeployed capital), while venture capital assets under management exceed $1 trillion. These institutional investors are reshaping private markets, professionalizing operations, driving consolidation, and often fundamentally changing the character of the businesses they acquire.
For small business owners, the rise of private equity presents both opportunity and threat. It creates potential exit paths that did not exist a generation ago, but it also introduces well-capitalized competitors into previously fragmented local markets.