--- title: "Private Credit Redemption Stress Test: Apollo Backs It, Citing \"Market's Short-Term Misalignment\"" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/281533930.md" description: "Apollo President stated that reports surrounding retail investors' withdrawal from private credit funds are merely \"minor friction on the edges\" of the direct lending industry and emphasized that redemption restrictions are clearly stipulated and operating as expected. He characterized the current redemption wave as the industry's \"growing pains\" rather than a structural crisis" datetime: "2026-04-02T13:33:06.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281533930.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281533930.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281533930.md) --- > Supported Languages: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281533930.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281533930.md) # Private Credit Redemption Stress Test: Apollo Backs It, Citing "Market's Short-Term Misalignment" The private credit market is facing pressure from large-scale withdrawals by retail investors, but industry giants are choosing to respond head-on. Jim Zelter, President of Apollo Global Management, publicly defended the asset class, characterizing the current wave of redemptions as the industry's "growing pains" rather than a structural crisis. In a Bloomberg Television interview on Thursday, Zelter stated that **reports surrounding retail investors' withdrawal from private credit funds are merely "minor friction on the edges" of the direct lending industry, and emphasized that redemption restrictions are clearly stipulated and operating as expected.** Shortly after Zelter's remarks, Blue Owl Capital announced it would restrict redemptions for two of its private credit funds, after investors sought to redeem approximately 41% and 22% of shares in these funds during the first quarter. This redemption wave has affected several leading institutions. Apollo Debt Solutions, Apollo's $25 billion Business Development Company (BDC), capped redemptions at 5% of outstanding shares this Monday, after investors requested to redeem 11.2% of shares. This means only about 45% of redemption requests were fulfilled. BlackRock, Ares Management, and other institutions have also imposed redemption limits on their relevant funds. ## Redemption Limits Spread, Retail Investor Funds Face Roadblocks Business Development Companies (BDCs), which are private credit funds catering to retail investors, have recently experienced large-scale redemption requests, leading multiple managers to trigger redemption limit mechanisms. The situation for Apollo Debt Solutions is particularly prominent. According to a letter to shareholders, the fund limited redemptions to 5% of outstanding shares, while investors actually requested to redeem 11.2%. Ultimately, only about 45% of redemption requests were met, a lower fulfillment rate than some comparable funds. In comparison, BlackRock set the same 5% redemption cap earlier this month for its $26 billion non-public BDC, at which time investors had requested to redeem 9.3%. Morgan Stanley's North Haven Private Income Fund had a pro-rata redemption limit similar to Apollo's. According to previous Bloomberg reports, the amount of money investors are waiting to withdraw from private credit funds is nearing $5 billion. ## Zelter: Rules Are Transparent, Fiduciary Duty Fulfilled Facing external scrutiny, Zelter directly cited fund terms in the interview to endorse the managers' actions. **"On the first page, it is clearly stated with 5% redemption structure, to protect all investors,"** he said, \*\*"We are fulfilling our fiduciary duty, and this is actually a rather straightforward conversation." \*\* Zelter also attributed some of the current situation's causes to insufficient information dissemination on the sales side. He stated at an Asian conference last week that "certain distribution channels in certain regions of the world" may not have adequately communicated the inherent risks of private credit to retail investors, leading to a mismatch between short-term redemption demands and asset liquidity. He also emphasized that the fundamental reason for private credit's widespread attention is the substantial returns it has generated for institutional investors over the past 15 years, achieving "compound growth that significantly outperforms high-yield bond and loan indices." ## Industry Executives Speak Out Collectively, Diverging from Media Narrative Zelter is not an isolated case. Kenneth Caplan, Co-Chief Investment Officer at Blackstone Group, recently also pointed out that "**there's a huge disconnect between media headlines and the news cycle and what we're actually seeing in our portfolios**," adding that default rates are currently at extremely low levels. However, the tension between market reality and executive statements remains. Private credit, as an illiquid form of leveraged finance, is facing increasing scrutiny regarding its suitability for retail investors with liquidity needs. The emergence of large-scale redemption requests stems partly from market concerns about the industry's lending practices and the exposure of related companies to the disruptive risks of artificial intelligence. ## Middle East Tensions May Affect Sovereign Wealth Fund Allocation Beyond the private credit issue, Zelter also assessed the potential impact of Middle East tensions on Apollo's strategic partners. He stated that the ongoing Middle East conflict might prompt sovereign wealth funds in the region to shift more focus to domestic markets, "When the conflict is over, they will need to focus on domestic capital expenditures." However, Zelter indicated that this impact is only marginal, and he has not observed any signs recently that these partners would deviate from their broader investment objectives because of this. ### Related Stocks - [Apollo Global Management, Inc. 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