Singapore's GIC Pte retained Evercore Inc. to divest roughly $2 billion in private credit fund commitments, marking one of the larger secondary transactions from a sovereign wealth fund in the current cycle. The mandate surfaced in early May, according to three people with knowledge of the process. GIC declined to comment. Evercore declined to comment.
The assets under consideration span fund interests accumulated over the past five to seven years, predominantly in North American direct lending vehicles and European unitranche platforms. GIC has been an active allocator to private credit since 2017, with exposure estimated north of $15 billion as of last year. The $2 billion package represents roughly 13 percent of that book, a measured reduction rather than a wholesale retreat. Pricing discussions are ongoing, with bids expected in the 85 to 92 cents range depending on underlying fund vintage and manager reputation. One counterparty described the portfolio as "clean but not exceptional."
This is not distress. GIC remains among the most disciplined large allocators, with a 20-year annualized real return of 4.2 percent through March 2024. The move reflects two dynamics. First, secondary volume in private credit has surged to an estimated $18 billion in transaction value over the trailing twelve months, up from $6 billion in 2022, creating liquid exit windows that did not exist two years ago. Second, GIC's internal allocation models appear to favor rotating capital toward infrastructure debt and opportunistic real estate credit, where spreads have widened materially since late 2023. The fund has been a net buyer in distressed European commercial mortgage portfolios since January, deploying an estimated $800 million through direct purchases and co-investment vehicles.
The timing matters. Private credit secondaries are trading at discounts that reflect both rate uncertainty and the absence of forced sellers, but bid-ask spreads have narrowed. GP-led continuation funds and LP-led portfolio sales now clear at pricing that pencils for patient capital. GIC is not the only sovereign testing liquidity. Abu Dhabi Investment Authority shopped a smaller package in March, and a Canadian pension plan is preparing a $1.2 billion secondary process expected to launch by mid-June. The denominator effect has reversed for most large allocators, but rebalancing is active.
Operators should watch for pricing clarity on the GIC package by late June, as that will set a floor for similar vintages. The secondary market's ability to absorb $2 billion from a non-distressed seller without material price concessions will signal whether private credit has genuine two-way liquidity or merely a bid when sovereigns want out. Evercore's ability to place the full amount versus a partial sale will also indicate whether buyers view current entry points as tactical or structural.
GIC's next allocation report is due in July. The private credit line will be the one to read.