TLDR:
Dry powder refers to the uncommitted capital that a private equity or venture capital firm has available to invest — raised but not yet deployed — representing firepower for future deals.
Dry Powder and Market Cycles
Dry powder levels in VC and PE markets provide useful intelligence about near-term investment activity. High dry powder periods — such as 2021 when US VC funds had record uncommitted capital — drive up valuations because more capital is chasing deals than quality companies. Low dry powder periods — following market contractions — result in compressed valuations and longer fundraising timelines. Founders planning fundraises should monitor aggregate dry powder levels as one input to timing decisions.
For PE funds, deploying dry powder strategically across market cycles is a core portfolio management competency. Funds with patient capital and committed LP bases can wait for market dislocations (recessions, sector downturns, regulatory disruptions) to deploy at more attractive prices. However, LPs expect capital deployment within the fund’s investment period — holding dry powder too long creates LP pressure and management fee economics issues.