HomeNewsOpinionPrivate credit and mini-millionaires don’t mix

Private credit and mini-millionaires don’t mix

The push to fundraise from wealthy individuals is turning managers into high-end concierge services

May 29, 2024 / 11:15 IST
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Private credit
Private credit funds are in a much better place than real estate trusts, which are beset with higher mortgage costs and a global commercial property downturn.

As fundraising from pension and endowment funds slows, private credit managers have set their eyes on wealthy individuals. The success of the $54 billion Blackstone Private Credit Fund, which launched less than four years ago, prompted the likes of Blue Owl Capital Inc to establish their own versions. And they’re setting lofty growth targets. Ares Management Corp, for instance, is planning to expand its assets under management by almost 75 percent to $750 billion by 2028, with a good chunk of the money expected from retail.

The pitch to the mini-millionaires is simple — they don’t need to worry about public markets’ extreme fluctuations. But is the $1.7 trillion industry ready for a new clientele that might be more flighty and — gasp — ready to air their grievances in public if a fund’s performance is underwhelming?

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To lure private wealth, new funds are allowing people to withdraw money at regular intervals, as opposed to the more traditional closed-ended structures where institutional investors’ capital is locked up for the life of the fund, which can last a decade. Stakeholders in Blackstone Inc.’s private credit fund, for instance, can redeem up to 5 percent of total net asset value each quarter, per board approval.