Close Menu
Creative Learning GuildCreative Learning Guild
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Creative Learning GuildCreative Learning Guild
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • All
    • News
    • Trending
    • Celebrities
    • Privacy Policy
    • About
    • Contact Us
    • Terms Of Service
    Creative Learning GuildCreative Learning Guild
    Home » Inside the Harvard Spinout That Is Disrupting Private Credit and Making Institutional Investors Nervous
    Education

    Inside the Harvard Spinout That Is Disrupting Private Credit and Making Institutional Investors Nervous

    Errica JensenBy Errica JensenApril 23, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    A small company founded on Ivy League credentials is making moves that the biggest alternative asset managers on Wall Street have noticed and are not entirely comfortable with in a glass-and-brick building somewhere close to Harvard Square, where the air still carries the unique blend of coffee and institutional ambition that defines Cambridge on a weekday morning.

    When compared to the trillion-dollar balance sheets of Blackstone or Apollo, Evolution Capital Management, a Harvard spinout, has surpassed $4 billion in assets under management. However, when you take into account the market it currently operates in, this milestone may seem insignificant. The year for private credit is not going well. According to Fitch Ratings, the private credit default rate for U.S. corporate borrowers reached a record 9.2% in 2025. For non-traded private credit vehicles, Moody’s has changed its forecast to negative. One vehicle saw 41% of redemption requests at Blue Owl’s funds, while another saw 22%. The $3.5 trillion asset class is quickly realizing that the second half of its ten-year promise of equity-like returns with bond-like volatility may have been overly optimistic.

    CompanyEvolution Capital Management
    OriginHarvard University spinout
    Assets Under ManagementPushing beyond $4 billion (as of April 2026)
    Strategy FocusPrivate credit; shifting toward “HALO” investing — Heavy Assets, Low Obsolescence
    Market Context$3.5 trillion private credit market under stress; record 9.2% default rate (Fitch, 2025)
    Key DifferentiatorTangible asset focus (infrastructure, data centers) vs. software-heavy lending peers
    Competitive PositionAgile alternative to large incumbents: Blackstone, Apollo, Ares, Blue Owl
    BackdropBDC redemption crisis; AI disruption fears hitting software-loan portfolios
    Institutional Nervousness SourceOpaque valuations, quarterly mark schedules, liquidity mismatches, leverage concerns
    Harvard Policy ConnectionHarvard Kennedy School paper (Antonio Weiss, June 2025) warned of private credit systemic risk
    Wall Street Stress ResponseJPMorgan marked down collateral; three major banks disclosed $108B private credit exposure
    Inside the Harvard Spinout That Is Disrupting Private Credit and Making Institutional Investors Nervous
    Inside the Harvard Spinout That Is Disrupting Private Credit and Making Institutional Investors Nervous

    Evolution is expanding in that setting. From the outside, it’s not always clear whether the timing is extremely fortunate or extremely well thought out. The company’s positioning around what analysts refer to as HALO investing—Heavy Assets, Low Obsolescence—does seem to be intentional. The concept is simple, but its implementation is not: the strategy concentrates on tangible assets with long economic lives rather than lending to software companies whose revenue models are currently being renegotiated by AI. infrastructure. data centers. physical items that don’t go out of style when a new model is released. A company positioned against that exposure occupies an interesting position in a market where major funds’ exposure to software-company loans—the same software loans on which JPMorgan subtly marked down collateral earlier this year—is the main cause of institutional anxiety.

    Instead of collapsing abruptly, the larger private credit crisis has the feel of a gradual unwinding. The Blue Owl situation, which started last fall when redemption requests at one of its non-traded business development companies grew to the point where the company tried a merger to handle the issue—a merger it later abandoned due to the losses it would have caused investors—was one of the triggers. The episode sparked concerns about the underlying loans’ health, which quickly gained traction. Elevated redemption requests were made by investors at BDCs managed by Apollo, Ares, Blackstone, BlackRock, and Morgan Stanley. The funds mostly refused to fully honor them, citing caps intended to safeguard all investors. In addition to acknowledging that the pressure is genuine, Blackstone did consent to a record 7.9% withdrawal from its flagship private credit fund.

    The crisis has caused a slightly different kind of anxiety for institutional investors, such as pensions, endowments, and university funds. The non-traded BDCs that have been the focus of the drama do not contain the majority of them. However, they are observing while in private credit. The chief investment officer of the $60 billion Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund, Angela Miller-May, explained that she had to give Blue Owl a call to make sure her fund’s investments in Atalaya, a company that Blue Owl purchased in 2024, were distinct from the problematic vehicles. They were. However, the very fact that she had to make that call is a type of data point in and of itself.

    Evolution’s positioning subtly recognizes the structural nature of the deeper issue. Valuations are usually updated on a quarterly basis by private credit funds. The value of the loans is frequently determined by the same individuals who originated them. That arrangement is referred to as a feature—low volatility, steady returns—when everything is rising. Former Fidelity fund manager George Noble put it simply when credit began to deteriorate: “It’s a trapdoor.” Even more blunt was John Zito, co-president of Apollo’s asset management division, who told UBS clients, “I literally think all the marks are wrong.” A short seller’s perspective is not out of the ordinary. It is the co-president of one of the leading companies in the sector.

    Observing Evolution’s rise against this background gives one the impression that the company gains from both its investments and its non-investments. This company doesn’t have a legacy software loan book that requires an explanation. It is not handling the conflict between fund structures intended to restrict transparency and institutional clients who seek it. It emerged from Harvard with a particular thesis at a particular time, and the market has advanced toward that thesis more quickly than most people anticipated. There are still genuinely unanswered questions about whether $4 billion turns into $10 billion and whether the HALO strategy can withstand a full credit cycle. However, staying out of the conversation is a competitive advantage in a market where the biggest names are handling redemption crises and defending their valuation methodology to dubious journalists.


    Disclaimer

    Nothing published on Creative Learning Guild — including news articles, legal news, lawsuit summaries, settlement guides, legal analysis, financial commentary, expert opinion, educational content, or any other material — constitutes legal advice, financial advice, investment advice, or professional counsel of any kind. All content on this website is provided strictly for informational, educational, and news reporting purposes only. Consult your legal or financial advisor before taking any step.

    Harvard Harvard Spinout That Is Disrupting Private Credit
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Errica Jensen
    • Website

    Errica Jensen is the Senior Editor at Creative Learning Guild, where she leads editorial coverage of legal news, landmark lawsuits, class action settlements, and consumer rights developments and News across the United Kingdom, United States and beyond. With a career spanning over a decade at the intersection of legal journalism, lawsuits, settlements and educational publishing, Errica brings both rigorous research discipline, in-depth knowledge, experience and an accessible editorial voice to subjects that most readers find interesting and helpful.

    Related Posts

    South Korea’s Students Score Highest in the World. Their Mental Health Tells a Different Story

    April 23, 2026

    The Third-Grade Experiment: What Happened When Children Were Asked to Govern Their Own AI Rules

    April 23, 2026

    Inside the College That Replaced Half Its Adjuncts With AI — and Called It Progress

    April 23, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    Technology

    Avis’s Data Breach Settlement Is Open for Claims. Here’s What the Hack Actually Exposed

    By Janine HellerApril 23, 20260

    The notice appeared in the mail, nestled between utility bills and grocery flyers, exactly like…

    South Korea’s Students Score Highest in the World. Their Mental Health Tells a Different Story

    April 23, 2026

    Maryland Reaches Mega ‘Settlement in Principle’ With Ship Owner Over Key Bridge Collapse

    April 23, 2026

    Google Updates Gemini Suicide Safeguards as Wave of Wrongful Death AI Lawsuits Mounts

    April 23, 2026

    Designing the Future of Africa: Rice360’s High-Stakes Educational Engineering Competition

    April 23, 2026

    The AI Fluency Index: Anthropic’s New Report Exposes a Massive Global Knowledge Gap

    April 23, 2026

    Oxford Researchers Found That AI Is Making Students Worse at Critical Thinking. Here’s the Evidence

    April 23, 2026

    Shielding Big Oil: Why Republicans Are Rushing to Protect Corporations from Climate Litigation

    April 23, 2026

    The Third-Grade Experiment: What Happened When Children Were Asked to Govern Their Own AI Rules

    April 23, 2026

    Inside the Harvard Spinout That Is Disrupting Private Credit and Making Institutional Investors Nervous

    April 23, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Privacy Policy
    • About
    • Contact Us
    • Terms Of Service
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.