GIC Pte has engaged Evercore to explore the sale of approximately $2 billion in private credit fund commitments, marking one of the larger sovereign divestments in the asset class since liquidity conditions improved in late 2024. The Singapore-based wealth fund—which manages an estimated $770 billion across public and private markets—has been a steady allocator to private credit since the early 2010s, primarily through primary fund commitments and co-investments alongside U.S. and European direct lenders.
The mandate comes as secondary market volumes in private credit have climbed past $18 billion year-to-date, more than double the pace of 2023, according to broker estimates. Pricing has tightened to within 200-300 basis points of net asset value for top-quartile funds, compared to discounts exceeding 500 basis points during the 2022-23 dislocation. GIC's move appears calibrated to capture that narrowing discount window rather than signal distress—its credit book has performed in line with sector benchmarks, and the fund continues to allocate fresh capital to the space through newer vintage commitments.
What makes this sale noteworthy is the specific asset type. Private credit secondaries remain less liquid than buyout fund stakes, with fewer natural buyers and longer tail cash flows that complicate valuation. The $2 billion figure suggests GIC is packaging a diversified portfolio of fund interests—likely spanning middle-market direct lending, distressed credit, and opportunistic strategies—to create enough scale for institutional buyers. Probable counterparties include Lexington Partners, Coller Capital, and HarbourVest, all of which have raised dedicated secondaries vehicles in the past 18 months and are hunting for yield in a compressed market.
The timing aligns with a broader rebalancing wave among sovereign and pension allocators. Several large institutions have overshot their private credit targets after denominator effects reduced public equity exposure during 2022, and are now seeking exits to restore policy weights without sacrificing returns. GIC's engagement of Evercore—a firm with deep sovereign relationships and a specialized secondaries desk—signals a preference for controlled execution over a rushed auction.
Allocators should monitor pricing on this transaction as a benchmark for future sovereign exits. If GIC achieves par or near-par pricing, expect accelerated secondaries activity from peers including Temasek, ADIA, and larger U.S. public pensions with overweight credit positions. Conversely, if bids come in below 95 cents on the dollar, it would indicate that secondary liquidity remains more constrained than headline volume figures suggest, particularly for non-flagship funds. The transaction is expected to move through indicative bids in Q2 2025, with binding offers likely by mid-year.
Evercore's involvement also merits attention. The bank has advised on over $30 billion in secondaries transactions since 2020 and maintains direct relationships with most of the top-10 secondary buyers globally. Its selection suggests GIC is prioritizing discretion and speed over a broad public process, which typically favors pricing but extends timelines by 4-6 months.