
Corastone has added Fidelity Investments, Future Standard and Hamilton Lane as investors in its private-markets platform, expanding the group of institutions backing the company. The announcement follows the platform’s launch in November 2025 and reflects growing industry interest in technology designed to support the increasingly complex data and operational requirements of private-market activity.
While the investment news is notable, the announcement also highlights a broader structural issue in private markets: the absence of consistent data infrastructure across the investment lifecycle. As participation expands across institutional and wealth channels, firms are under increasing pressure to manage fund activity and investor records in a more structured and scalable way.
Fragmented data across the private-market lifecycle
Private-market investing generates its own set of operational data tied to fund activity, including subscription records, transaction instructions, capital calls, reporting updates and ownership changes. Unlike public markets, where transaction and reference data are standardised through established market infrastructure, these records are typically maintained separately by fund managers, administrators, custodians and investors.In practice, this means the same lifecycle events can be recorded in different formats across multiple organisations, with updates frequently exchanged through documents, spreadsheets, email or file transfers. The result can be fragmented recordkeeping and significant operational effort to reconcile data across participants.
Corastone says its platform is designed to address that fragmentation by providing shared infrastructure for managing lifecycle events and related data. The company highlights features such as electronic transaction tickets, automated workflows and a central repository intended to maintain synchronised records across participants.
Building a shared operating layer
According to Corastone, the platform supports electronic transaction tickets, standardised lifecycle-event processing and automated workflows covering activities such as subscriptions, capital calls, tenders, reporting and custodial integration. The company also highlights a central repository designed to maintain synchronised records across participants throughout the investment lifecycle.Corastone co-founder and president Hamid Gayibov describes the platform as a “common operating layer” intended to support higher transaction volumes and more complex investment structures without increasing operational burden.
The company also says that firms connecting to the platform can integrate once and gain access to a broader network of counterparties through APIs and file-based connectivity, reducing the need for multiple bespoke integrations between investors, administrators and managers.
Investor interest reflects operational challenges
The comments from Corastone’s new investors also emphasise the operational and data challenges associated with private markets.
Future Standard says it identified a need for technology capable of connecting the point-to-point systems used by investors and enabling “true straight-through-processing” of transactions. Hamilton Lane notes that operational complexity can act as a constraint on participation in private markets and points to the role of technology in improving transparency and efficiency.
Those remarks reflect a wider industry shift as firms seek infrastructure capable of supporting larger volumes of private-market transactions while maintaining accurate and consistent records across the investment lifecycle.
Infrastructure for a growing market
Private markets have expanded significantly in recent years, with a broader range of institutional and wealth investors participating in alternative assets. As a result, operational processes that historically evolved around smaller volumes and bespoke workflows are increasingly being re-examined.
Corastone’s platform materials highlight several areas where manual processes remain common, including document-based transaction handling, spreadsheet-driven recordkeeping and file-based data exchange between counterparties. The company is positioning its platform as an alternative model built around automation, shared workflows and synchronised data records across market participants.
Whether platforms of this kind develop into widely adopted infrastructure remains an open question. The announcement identifies a growing group of institutional participants, but provides limited public detail on transaction volumes, adoption across live workflows or interoperability with fund administrators and custodians.
For now, the addition of new investors suggests continued interest in technology aimed at improving the way private-market data and transactions are recorded, shared and processed as the sector continues to scale.
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