Italy’s private markets delivered a mixed performance in the first quarter of 2026, according to PitchBook’s latest regional update. While venture capital deal volume rebounded sharply, overall private equity activity slowed amid a broader European risk-off shift, and exits remained subdued. Macroeconomic resilience provided some support, yet geopolitical tensions—particularly the escalation of conflict in the Middle East—kept investors cautious.
PitchBook also pointed out in the research report that Italy’s economy continued its modest recovery. GDP growth is estimated to have matched the 0.3% quarter-on-quarter pace seen in late 2025, helped by earlier ECB rate cuts that boosted investment and consumption.
Weak exports remained a drag, while inflation edged higher to 1.7% by March as energy-price declines slowed.
The labor market delivered a pleasant surprise: unemployment fell to a record-low 5.1% in January before ticking up slightly to 5.3% in February. Fiscal consolidation stayed on track, moving steadily toward EU targets.
At the European level, the ECB kept rates on hold in March and raised its 2026 inflation forecast to 2.6%, adopting a data-dependent stance.Venture capital showed contrasting trends.
Deal count surged to 225 transactions—more than double the prior quarter—signalling renewed activity at the early stage. However, total deal value halved from the previous period, closing at roughly €400 million.
The standout transaction was Rent2Cash’s €100 million raise; the rental-management platform plans to use the capital to expand internationally by monetizing landlords’ future rental income streams.
Exit activity stayed quiet, with only a handful of transactions completed, reflecting ongoing caution amid geopolitical uncertainty.
On the fundraising side, just one new VC fund closed: 360 Capital’s Poli360 II, which secured €85 million to back early-stage deep-tech startups and university spin-offs.
Overall VC assets under management and dry powder have been trending lower over the past year.
Private-equity deal activity moderated in line with European trends. Sponsors adopted a more defensive posture, resulting in a higher share of add-on acquisitions and fewer primary buyouts.
Total PE deal value reached €6.2 billion, while exit value stood at €2.2 billion—the lowest quarterly exit tally in three years.
Corporate acquirers, however, stepped up, driving a noticeable resurgence in strategic takeovers.
Fundraising remained limited: two new funds closed in the lower mid-market segment.
QuattroR’s MidCap Fund raised €260 million, and Gradiente III secured €180 million.
Public equity markets reflected broader volatility. The FTSE MIB posted a 1.4% year-to-date decline through March, outperforming the DAX, S&P 500, and STOXX Europe 600 but lagging the FTSE 100.
A strong February rally that approached all-time highs gave way to a March pullback as Middle East tensions rattled sentiment. Defense and aerospace names shone, with Leonardo rising 13% for the quarter.
One small IPO completed: Praexidia Industrie Strategiche, an investment vehicle focused on stakes in Italian defense, security, and aerospace SMEs.
Regionally, Milan continued to dominate Italian private market activity, followed by Rome and Turin.
The quarter also benefited from the successful Milan-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics (6–22 February), which generated an estimated €5.3 billion economic impact and boosted northern Italy’s tourism.
Overall, Q1 2026 painted a picture of resilient fundamentals tempered by caution.
With two PE funds and one VC fund closed, capital deployment remains selective. PitchBook also indicated that investors appear to be waiting for clearer signals on monetary policy and geopolitical stability before committing more aggressively.
PitchBook researchers concluded that as Italy heads into the rest of 2026, the interplay between domestic economic strength and global uncertainties will likely shape the pace of private market recovery (should there actually be one in the near-term).