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Long-Only Mutual Funds Sitting on Hundreds of Billions in Late-Stage Dry Powder

All-In Podcast · Inside the Private Stock Market Boom: SpaceX, Anthropic, OpenAI & the Rise of Secondaries · June 7, 2026
Long-Only Mutual Funds Sitting on Hundreds of Billions in Late-Stage Dry Powder
All-In Podcast
All-In Podcast
Inside the Private Stock Market Boom: SpaceX, Anthropic, OpenAI & the Rise of Secondaries
"When a company goes public and lockup expires, it moves out of that bucket. So this is going to be hundreds of billions of dollars of new late-stage demand that is coming back to the market after kind of being out of the market."
Gavin Baker revealed that major mutual funds including Fidelity, Baillie Gifford, and T. Rowe Price are maxed out on SEC-imposed private allocation limits and will unleash hundreds of billions in pent-up demand once current private holdings go public. Bailey Gifford was forced to sell SpaceX in 2024 due to these constraints. This represents a massive wall of capital poised to enter late-stage privates and new IPOs, potentially sustaining elevated valuations.

About this episode

In a panel discussion at an investment conference, Brad Gerstner, Gavin Baker, Kelly Rodriguez, Jason Calacanis, and Chamath Palihapitiya debated the explosive growth of private secondary markets and the implications for retail democratization, exit liquidity, and founder incentives. Gerstner opened with striking data: secondary market volume has doubled since the 2021 peak, employee secondary sales now represent 31% of all primary VC activity, and transactions are pricing at a 6% premium to fair value—reversing years of discounts. The panel centered on whether prolonged private company life cycles serve founders or harm decision-making. Gavin Baker revealed that Mark Zuckerberg publicly admitted Facebook's disastrous HTML5 bet in 2010-2012 could have been avoided with public market scrutiny, directly contradicting the narrative that staying private enables superior long-term thinking. Baker and Palihapitiya accused private investors of sycophantic behavior to protect deal access, contrasting this with the arm's-length discipline public markets enforce. Kelly Rodriguez, CEO of Forge (recently acquired by Schwab), argued that secondary infrastructure is essential for employee liquidity and will democratize access to companies like SpaceX and Anthropic for 46 million Schwab retail clients. Gerstner expressed concern that retail could become exit liquidity at elevated valuations and warned on CNBC against YOLO-ing all capital into late-stage privates. The panel also discussed venture firms engaging in unnatural acts to chase exposure to trillion-dollar private names, the coming wave of hundreds of billions in mutual fund dry powder once IPO lockups expire, and the rise of interval funds offering unaccredited access to private assets. The conversation concluded with panelists naming under-the-radar secondary opportunities including Sierra, Revolut, Neuro Robotics, Vast, and Zipline.

Key takeaways

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