U.S. direct lending issuance slowed 23% sequentially entering the third quarter of 2026, the sharpest deceleration since the asset class crossed $1.7 trillion in assets under management earlier this year. Apollo Global's $26 billion Apollo Debt Solutions fund imposed a 5% quarterly redemption cap on June 22 after withdrawal requests hit 17% of shares outstanding, the first meaningful gate in a flagship vehicle since the post-Covid expansion began. Investor flows into private credit strategies fell to $8.2 billion in May, down from a monthly average of $14.1 billion in the prior twelve months, according to industry data aggregated across the top fifteen managers.
The cooling arrives without a credit event. Loan performance remains stable, with trailing twelve-month default rates in middle-market direct lending holding near 1.4%, below historical norms. What changed is the structure of the bid. Family offices and insurance allocators, the two cohorts that drove 68% of net inflows since late 2023, are pulling back on new commitments while existing limited partners rotate capital within the ecosystem. The arbitrage is elementary: redeem from funds priced at par, reinvest into similar vehicles trading at 12-18% discounts on secondary markets. Apollo's gate formalized what was already visible in flow data—redemption requests are rising not because portfolios are breaking, but because the next vintage offers better entry points.
The valuation question is what separates observers from allocators now. Several private credit funds marked down software-focused middle-market loans in recent quarters, reflecting pressure in a subsector that absorbed 31% of direct lending volume between 2022 and 2024. The markdowns were modest, 3-7% on individual positions, but they surfaced a discomfort that has been theoretical until now: when one manager writes down a borrower and another does not, and both funds hold paper on the same capital structure, someone's NAV is wrong. The data on cross-holdings remains opaque, but the divergence in reported valuations is widening. Allocators with exposure to multiple funds are beginning to ask for loan-level detail, a request that was rare eighteen months ago.
The sector is not collapsing. It is repricing expectations. The $1.7 trillion asset base will not evaporate, but the assumption that private credit grows at 18-22% annually in perpetuity is adjusting to a 9-12% trajectory, which is still faster than most fixed income categories but slow enough to change the math on fee drag and liquidity premiums. Managers who built infrastructure for $50 billion fundraising years are now operating in a $28-33 billion annual environment. That gap shows up in hiring freezes, delayed fund launches, and the first wave of team departures to smaller shops. The talent migration has been quiet but directional.
Operators should track three follow-on developments over the next 90-120 days: secondary market pricing on private credit fund stakes, particularly whether discounts widen past 20% as more LPs test liquidity; the pace of markdown disclosures in Q3 earnings, especially in funds with concentrated software exposure; and whether Apollo's gate prompts similar moves at peer funds facing redemption pressure, which would signal a structural shift in how the asset class manages duration mismatch. Insurance allocators are scheduled to report updated private credit exposures in August filings, and any material pullback there will confirm the flow deceleration is institutional, not anecdotal.
The boom is not over. The boom is aging into something that requires underwriting again.