Stellus Capital Management closed its fourth flagship credit fund at $1.5 billion of investable capital in May 2026, meeting its stated target without oversubscription. The Houston-based manager specializes in direct lending to lower-middle-market companies, typically $5 million to $75 million EBITDA enterprises operating below the core focus of Apollo, Ares, and Blackstone.
The fund reached target capitalization after what sources familiar describe as a 14-month marketing cycle, beginning in Q1 2025. Stellus did not disclose hard-cap parameters or LP composition, but the firm historically draws from insurance general accounts, state pension systems, and European wealth platforms. The prior vehicle, Stellus Credit Fund III, closed at $1.1 billion in 2022 during peak vintage years for private credit. That fund achieved its target in roughly nine months, illustrating the timeline extension now characteristic of non-mega funds.
The deceleration matters because sub-scale managers face portfolio construction constraints. Stellus commits $10 million to $50 million per borrower, which at $1.5 billion fund size implies 30 to 150 positions depending on concentration tolerance. The firm targets 12% to 15% gross IRR through first-lien senior secured structures, often with equity co-investment kickers. That return band now competes with direct-lending interval funds offering 9% to 11% current yield and monthly liquidity, a structural headwind absent in 2021. Worth noting: Stellus underwrites to companies with trailing twelve-month EBITDA often under $25 million, a segment where covenant-lite erosion has been slower than in broadly syndicated loans but where refinancing risk climbs if rates stay elevated past 2027.
Allocators should watch three follow-on developments. First, deployment pace through Q4 2026—if Stellus has $400 million or more invested by year-end, the fund is performing to plan; anything below $250 million suggests deal-flow friction. Second, whether Fund V marketing begins before Fund IV crosses 50% deployed, which would signal LP appetite remains firm. Third, any announced co-investment vehicles or separately managed accounts, which would indicate the firm is segmenting capital to preserve IRR on the flagship pool while capturing larger opportunities.
Stellus manages approximately $3.8 billion in assets under management as of the close, positioning it in the second decile of private-credit managers by AUM. The firm has completed over 450 investments since inception in 2012, with a cumulative gross loss rate below 2% by count. The business model depends on sourcing repetition and operational diligence, not brand. That works until it doesn't, and the longer fundraising cycle is the market's way of asking whether incremental dollars here outperform passive high-yield or leveraged-loan exposure at current spreads.