Economist Mohamed El-Erian has highlighted a critical pressure point in the private credit market following Apollo Global Management‘s (NYSE:APO) decision to restrict investor withdrawals from its $25 billion debt fund.

A ‘Notable’ Shift In Private Credit

“This is notable news… given Apollo’s standing in private credit,” El-Erian posted on X, reacting to reports that Apollo Debt Solutions capped withdrawals at 5% of outstanding shares Monday after redemption requests surged to 11.2%.

The gating exposes a growing structural mismatch: funds offering periodic liquidity to retail investors while holding highly illiquid direct loans.

When redemption demands spike during periods of market stress, asset managers are increasingly forced to implement withdrawal limits to prevent catastrophic fire sales.

Industry-Wide Liquidity Squeeze

Apollo’s move is not an isolated incident; it represents a broader wave of strain rippling through alternative asset managers. BlackRock Inc. (NYSE:BLK) recently limited withdrawals from its $26 billion HPS Corporate Lending Fund after redemption requests hit 9.3% of its net asset value.

Similarly, Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) curbed redemptions on its North Haven Private Income Fund after investor withdrawal demand neared 11%.

Even Blackstone Inc.‘s (NYSE:BX) $82.7 billion flagship BCRED fund suffered its first monthly loss in three years this February, accompanied by an unusually high $3.7 billion in first-quarter redemptions.

Mounting Systemic Risks

The sector’s rapid expansion to a $1.8 trillion market over the last decade is now facing severe macroeconomic tests, including tighter financial conditions and elevated interest rates.

Famed “Big Short” investor Steve Eisman recently declared, “There is no doubt in my mind that a credit cycle is emerging,” labeling vulnerabilities in certain loan securitizations as “potentially a disaster.”

Adding to the grim outlook, Apollo co-president John Zito reportedly warned at a private event that some private software loans may only recover 20 to 40 cents on the dollar, indicating the industry must brace for prolonged turbulence as retail-driven flows rapidly reverse.

Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.

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