GIC Pte, Singapore's $770B sovereign wealth fund, retained Evercore to divest roughly $2B in private credit fund commitments, marking one of the largest announced sovereign exits from the asset class since liquidity tightened in 2023. The mandate targets fund interests across 15-20 underlying managers, concentrated in direct lending and distressed credit vehicles raised between 2019 and 2021, according to sources familiar with the portfolio composition. Evercore began circulating teasers to secondary buyers in early April.
The divestment comes eighteen months after GIC publicly flagged intentions to trim illiquid alternatives from 42% to sub-38% of total AUM by fiscal 2026. Private credit, which GIC began building in 2014, now represents an estimated $18-22B of the portfolio—roughly 2.8% of assets. The fund has not added new primary commitments to private credit managers since Q2 2023, redirecting capital instead toward public credit and Asian infrastructure debt. The $2B sale would reduce GIC's private credit exposure by approximately 10%, aligning with the broader rebalancing timeline disclosed in the fund's March 2024 annual report.
The secondary market absorbed $142B in private fund stakes in 2024, up 34% year-over-year, with private credit representing 22% of volume. Pricing remains disciplined: credit-focused secondaries traded at 88-92% of NAV in Q1 2025, compared to 94-97% for buyout funds, reflecting buyer concern over refinancing risk in portfolios originated during the 2020-2021 vintage. GIC's decision to exit now captures pricing before mid-2025 redemption queues potentially widen discounts. Sovereign and pension sellers accounted for 41% of secondary supply last year, the highest share since 2016, as allocators confront over-commitment to illiquid strategies during a period of elevated public market yields.
Allocators should monitor three developments over the next 90-120 days: first, whether GIC's exit pricing clears at or below the 88% lower bound, signaling broader NAV pressure on 2020-2021 vintage credit funds; second, if Canada Pension Plan or Australian Future Fund follow with similar-scale private credit divestitments, confirming a sovereign trend rather than isolated rebalancing; third, whether direct lenders like Ares, Blue Owl, or Blackstone begin raising dedicated continuation vehicles to absorb LP secondary supply, a structural shift that would institutionalize liquidity in what remains a largely illiquid market.
Evercore expects to close the transaction by late Q2, ahead of GIC's fiscal year-end reporting cycle in March 2026.