
Schroders Capital announced an ambitious target to reach £100 billion in assets under management by the end of 2027, marking a significant expansion from its current £72.8 billion as of October 31, 2025. The private markets arm of Schroders plc outlined this growth strategy during an investor day presentation, revealing plans to capture £20 billion in cumulative net new business over the three-year period from 2025 to 2027.
The firm currently holds the position as Europe's sixth-largest private markets manager, operating across four core segments: Private Equity, Infrastructure, Real Estate, and Private Debt and Credit Alternatives. To support this expansion, Schroders Capital has assembled a dedicated business development team of 40 professionals and committed up to £500 million in seed capital for launching new investment offerings.
The timing of this announcement reflects broader momentum in European private markets, where institutional investors are increasingly seeking alternatives to traditional fixed-income investments amid persistent rate volatility. Private markets assets under management across Europe reached record levels in 2024, driven by pension funds and sovereign wealth funds diversifying away from public market exposure.
Schroders Capital's growth target represents a 37% increase in assets over approximately two years, requiring the firm to attract roughly £10 billion in new commitments annually. This pace exceeds industry averages but aligns with similar expansion plans announced by competing private markets managers across the region.
The private markets surge reflects a fundamental shift in institutional asset allocation patterns that extends beyond alternative investments into currency and commodity markets. When large asset managers redeploy capital from traditional bonds and equities into private markets, the resulting flows create secondary effects across foreign exchange rates and precious metals pricing.
Currency markets often experience volatility when major institutional reallocation occurs, particularly as private markets investments typically involve longer lock-up periods and different geographical exposures than public markets. The British pound's performance against major currencies could benefit from increased domestic private markets activity, while emerging market currencies may face pressure as capital flows redirect toward developed market private assets.
Precious metals markets traditionally respond to shifts in institutional portfolio construction, especially when alternative investments gain prominence during periods of public market uncertainty. Gold and silver often serve as portfolio hedges when institutional investors reduce liquid asset holdings in favor of illiquid alternatives like private equity and infrastructure.
Large-scale institutional asset reallocation creates the type of market regime changes that require sophisticated trading approaches to navigate effectively. When private markets pull capital from traditional asset classes, the resulting liquidity shifts and correlation breakdowns demand systematic analysis rather than reactive positioning.
Growth One's algorithmic trading platform specializes in detecting these institutional flow patterns across Forex and Metal markets, where private markets expansion creates measurable impacts. The system's multi-timeframe approach distinguishes between temporary volatility from capital reallocation and longer-term trend shifts that emerge as institutional portfolios restructure. Through rigorous backtesting across multiple market cycles, including periods of significant private markets growth, the platform's strategies adapt to changing correlation patterns between currency pairs and precious metals pricing.