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Apollo Private Credit Fund Caps Cash Exit Requests at 5%

  • Payout will lead to net outflows of $400 million
  • Fund expects more inflows from institutions this year
  • Withdrawal requests moderated from US, increased from offshore

NEW YORK, June 22 (Reuters) - Apollo Global's $26 billion private credit fund, Apollo Debt Solutions (ADS), ‌said on Monday it was curbing redemptions at 5% of its shares after investors sought to withdraw approximately 16.8% of the total.

Paying out those investors will bring gross outflows from the fund to $700 million, ​outpacing inflows of $300 million, based on preliminary data, the fund said in a ​filing. That leaves net outflows worth about 3% of the fund's asset ⁠value so far this year.

Redemption requests rose from about 11.2% in the previous quarter at ​the fund, which is mainly aimed at wealthy individuals and typically provides an opportunity to ​withdraw some money once every three months.

Vehicles of this type, structured as business development companies (BDCs), have seen a surge in withdrawal requests this year amid rising concerns about transparency, lending discipline and exposure to ​software among funds that lend directly to companies outside the traditional banking system.

ADS said in ​the filing that institutional investors were continuing to show strong demand for private credit, adding it expects "institutional ‌fundraising ⁠for our direct lending strategies will exceed that of the wealth channel this year."

There was a "notable regional split" among investors, the filing went on, specifying that requests to redeem from the onshore United States "moderated sequentially to approximately 4.3%, while redemptions from offshore investors increased to ​12.5%".

Most similar private credit ​funds opted to return ⁠no more than the customary 5% to their shareholders in the first quarter, after some let clients pull out more than that earlier this ​year.

Apollo President Jim Zelter said last month he expected continued withdrawals, and ​that the "turbulence" ⁠was not over.

ADS said it had returned 1.5% this year through May 31, which compares with a 1.2% gain in the Morningstar LSTA index of publicly traded leveraged loans.

The fund's annualized ⁠returns since ​it launched in January 2022 were 8.13% through the ​end of May. It had previously reported returns since inception of 8.34% through February.

Reporting by Isla Binnie in New ​York and Pragyan Kalita in Bengaluru; Editing by Sahal Muhammed, Stephen Coates and Himani Sarkar

Source: Reuters


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