TPG Private Equity Opportunities Sells $78.8M in Units
The Fort Worth-based fund’s broader complex took in nearly $85 million on the same day, with underlying portfolio appreciation of roughly $204 million driving valuation gains.
May 25, 2026

TPG Private Equity Opportunities, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership operating under the name T-POP, raised approximately $78.8 million through the sale of unregistered limited partnership units as part of its ongoing continuous private offering. The transactions closed on May 1, 2026.
The capital came in across three unit classes:
- Class R-I — 1,413,736 units sold for roughly $44.7 million, the largest single tranche
- Class R-S — 768,583 units totaling about $24.1 million
- Class F — 305,197 units priced to bring in $10 million
The offering was conducted under the registration exemptions provided by Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act of 1933 and Regulation D, with units distributed to third-party investors. A meaningful portion of the issuance was routed through TPG Private Equity Opportunities (TE), L.P., a Delaware-based feeder vehicle designed for tax-exempt and non-U.S. investors. The feeder fund invests substantially all of its assets indirectly in the Fund’s Class R-I units, and it received 905,224 Class R-I units along with 305,197 Class F units as part of the May 1 transactions.
T-POP operates within a broader structure known as the T-POP Fund Complex, which includes the feeder vehicle and certain parallel investment entities. Together, they invest substantially all of their capital into T-POP US Aggregator (CYM), L.P. Across the entire complex, including the Fund itself, interests totaling approximately $84.9 million were issued on the same May 1 date — a figure of demand that extends beyond the headline number attributed to the Fund alone.
Net Asset Value Snapshot
Alongside the capital raise disclosure, the Fund provided a detailed look at its Transactional Net Asset Value as of April 30, 2026. The valuation framework is used to set transaction pricing for unit purchases and redemptions, and it differs in some respects from net asset value calculated under generally accepted accounting principles in the United States.
The Fund’s investment in the Aggregator carried a fair value of approximately $1.49 billion against a cost basis of $1.29 billion — implying roughly $204 million in unrealized appreciation on the underlying portfolio. After accounting for accrued performance participation allocations of $4.6 million, management fees payable of $1.1 million, servicing fees of $380,000, and other liabilities of about $1.2 million, the Fund’s total Transactional NAV stood at approximately $1.486 billion.
That balance was distributed across roughly 46.9 million outstanding units spanning four classes:
- Class R-I — $31.62 per unit, more than 24.4 million units outstanding
- Class R-S — $31.37 per unit
- Class R-D — $31.55 per unit
- Class F — $32.77 per unit, the highest in the range
The variations in per-unit values reflect differences in fee structures across classes, particularly the application of servicing fees to Class R-S and Class R-D units, which are recognized monthly under the Transactional NAV methodology.
The Fund also noted that organizational and offering expenses advanced by its investment manager will begin reducing Transactional NAV ratably over a 60-month period starting in June 2026, providing a gradual rather than upfront impact on per-unit valuations.
Context
The disclosure adds to a steady cadence of capital-raising activity reported by large alternative investment platforms operating through continuous offerings. Similar private placements have featured in recent coverage of the non-traded alternatives space, reflecting persistent appetite among qualified investors for evergreen private market exposure.