Plus: Too much software exposure, LongRange eats up a Pizza Hut deal & more
June 21, 2026  |  Log in   |  Read online   |  Manage your subscription  
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The Weekend Pitch
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PE has yet to prove its AI bets to investors
Madeline Shi July 2024.jpg
By Madeline Shi
Senior Private Equity Reporter
Mainly targeted at administrative tasks, far rarer has AI been implemented by PE firms in a way that can increase revenue.
AI

Featured image by Jenna O’Malley/PitchBook News

Private equity firms have raced to embed AI into portfolio companies, betting it will reshape businesses and boost valuations, yet few have results to show for it.

A round of conversations with advisers provided a reality check on the hype, laying bare the distance between what the PE industry is hankering for from AI and what its experiments have delivered so far. While most firms have been tinkering enthusiastically, many haven’t done it in a way that has translated into financial gains.

The mainstream effort is aimed at automating unglamorous back-office work—coding invoices, generating reports, managing contracts and procurement—at this point, rarely is AI used to fuel growth.

“AI is an efficiency play, for sure,” said Anil Kumar, a managing director at Alvarez & Marsal who develops and deploys the firm’s generative AI tool suite for PE firms. The bigger value lies in using AI to improve revenue, generate more revenue streams and stay competitive, he said.

In a May survey by Alvarez & Marsal, which polled 100 executives across large-cap and midsized PE firms and their portfolio companies, 73% expected AI to increase the value of their portfolios over the next 12 months. Only 8% described themselves as “leading,” meaning that AI is making a material impact on EBITDA or moving the needle in exit narratives.

The bulk of the industry is still experimenting with selective use cases or running pilots; far fewer have wired AI into their workflows and delivered financial gains.

Meanwhile, the most common use of AI, named by 55% of respondents, is financial planning and analysis (FP&A) and performance management, the most ‘back-office’ of the different use cases covered in the survey.

“A lot of these use cases have improved personal productivity, but they’re not hitting the P&L,” said Christy Carter, the global head of Boston Consulting Group’s PE sector. “But using AI to drive accounts receivable faster and to reduce working capital versus just having an individual accountant or someone in finance using GPTs to make their day easier, those are two very different things.”

Read more
A MESSAGE FROM FIDELITY PRIVATE SHARES
The venture market is changing, founders need to know what comes next

Fundraising has changed dramatically in recent years. Capital is more concentrated, with investors writing fewer checks. AI companies now capture a larger share of funding, while valuations shift across the market.

Liquidity is improving after years of constrained exits. Acquisitions, buyouts, and potential IPOs may reshape how founders approach timing, valuation, and exits.

Our new report explores the venture trends shaping 2026 and what they mean for founders navigating fundraising and growth.

Inside the report:

  • How venture capital is evolving
  • Why valuations differ between AI and non-AI startups
  • What better liquidity means for exits and secondaries
  • How investors are evaluating companies in a more selective market

Download the report to understand the trends influencing venture capital and founder decisions for 2026.

Fidelity Column Image June 21 2026

TRIVIA
John Keeble/Getty Images

Photo by John Keeble/Getty Images

LongRange Capital agreed to acquire Pizza Hut in a $1.5 billion deal. Pizza Hut is now based in Louisville, KY, but back in 1958, brothers Dan and Frank Carney opened the first Pizza Hut in which city?

A) Springfield, IL
B) Wichita, KS
C) Columbus, OH
D) Kansas City, MO

Find your answer at the bottom of The Weekend Pitch!


ICYMI

A selection from our most-read articles of the past few days.

  • Private credit lenders are shutting the door on software buyouts, leaving PE sponsors with signed due diligence and no one to fund the deal. More here
  • The University of Utah has closed its much-scrutinized PE deal with Otro Capital, creating a potential blueprint for schools struggling to fund sports programs amid athlete revenue-sharing. Read on
  • Blackstone, Apollo Global Management and FS KKR Capital Corp. are among credit lenders taking the keys to software company Medallia from Thoma Bravo. Read more

QUOTE/UNQUOTE

“For two decades, its edge was building rather than buying. A rich, liquid stock lets the public company flip that instinct and buy capabilities instead. Cursor is among the fastest-growing assets in enterprise AI, and paying in richly valued stock is a low-friction way to ensure no rival owns it.”

— Franco Granda, a PitchBook senior analyst covering SpaceX and other private companies, speaking about SpaceX’s $60 billion acquisition of AI coding startup Cursor. Read more about one of the largest VC-backed acquisitions ever here.


TRIVIA

Answer: B

The Carney brothers opened their first pizza shop in their hometown of Wichita, KS. The chain went public in 1969, and eight years later was acquired by PepsiCo for $300 million. Read about how Pizza Hut found its way back into the private markets and its latest deal here.


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This edition of The Weekend Pitch was written by Madeline Shi and Nadine Manske. It was edited by Heather West and Nadine Manske.

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