By Hillary Canada

While it wasn't the best of times or the worst of times, per se, private equity fundraising in the U.S. and Europe last year looked very much like "A Tale of Two Cities."

With a flush debt market stateside allowing general partners to parse out distributions and strike new deals, private equity fundraising totals, including buyout, venture capital, mezzanine, secondary and fund of funds, rose 20% from $133 billion raised in 2011 to $160.4 billion during 2012, according to data from Dow Jones LP Source.

The increase in U.S. fundraising came in spite of a dreary second half, during which fundraising was down more than 20% compared with the first half.

In reality, the second half more closely resembled the story unfolding across the Atlantic, as macroeconomic worries and a lack of available debt financing brought the fundraising recovery to a halt. After a nearly 60% jump in fundraising totals between 2010 and 2011, the amount of capital raised during 2012 actually declined 1.8% to $58.1 billion from $59.2 billion a year earlier.

Without debt to fund new deals or distributions to shareholders, fundraising by buyout, coinvestment, growth, industry-focused and restructuring funds in Europe declined nearly 17%, to $38.9 billion from $46.8 billion. With the exception of 2009 and 2010, it was the worst fundraising year for the sector since 2004.

This contrasted starkly with the U.S. market where fundraising for that sector increased by a quarter to $114 billion, from $91.4 billion.

Despite the bad press given to large buyout firms during the year, more than 65% of that total was raised by funds of greater than $1 billion. More than a quarter of that $114 billion was raised by just five funds, including vehicles from Oaktree Capital (OAK), Providence Equity Partners, Ares Management, Warburg Pincus, and Advent International's behemoth Advent International GPE VII LP, which closed with $10.8 billion.

Fortune also smiled upon those in the U.S. mezzanine market, as yield-starved investors filled the coffers of general partners, which raised $10.7 billion, more than double the $5.2 billion raised in 2011. Funds from GSO Capital Partners, Prudential Capital Group and Crescent handily closed on more than $1 billion of capital each during the year.

The maturing secondary market appeared to provide a bit of liquid courage to investors during 2012. As industry executives predicted another record year of secondary sales, limited partners poured more than $21 billion to funds in Europe and the U.S. More than $9 billion of that was raised by just three European funds, from AXA Private Equity, Coller Capital Ltd. and Partners Group.

But for the fund-of-funds market, it was a much more sobering story, as LPs continued to eschew fees and advisors continued to present an alternative to smaller investors. Although fundraising climbed in 2012 in Europe compared with 2011, it was still the third-worst fundraising year for the asset class since 2003, during the aftermath of the tech-wreck.

Similarly, in the U.S., funds of funds raised $4.6 billion, a 53% drop from the $9.8 billion raised during 2011, making 2012 the worst fundraising year in more than a decade.

 
 
 

Write to Hillary Canada at hillary.canada@dowjones.com

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