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Apollo in talks to sell $3 billion private credit fund, WSJ reports

By Thomson Reuters May 10, 2026 | 7:55 PM

May 10 (Reuters) – Apollo Global Management has held talks to sell MidCap Financial Investment, its publicly listed business development company focused on private credit, ​the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday, ‌citing people familiar with the matter.

Apollo values the fund, known as MFIC, and its portfolio at about $3 billion, the report added.

Here are some details from the report:

• MFIC invests in loans ‌made ​by Apollo’s giant MidCap Financial, ⁠which lends to midsize ⁠companies. MidCap does not receive fee income from the loans it sells to MFIC, the WSJ report said.

• Apollo bought MidCap in 2013 to strengthen its ​direct-lending platform.

• According to the report, default in the fund jumped to 5.3% in the first quarter ⁠from 3.9% in December, and management ⁠has been using cash to repurchase ​shares this year because they traded at deep discounts to ​net asset value.

• The buyer for the fund ‌would likely be another business development company (BDC), the report added, and said the buyer could use shares in its own fund to purchase MFIC.

• Apollo and MidCap ⁠Financial Investment did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment.

• The news of the deal comes amid a ⁠difficult time for ‌U.S. private credit lenders, also known ⁠as BDCs, as weaker investor demand and ​rising ‌redemption pressure continue to weigh on the ​sector.

• Credit ⁠ratings agency Fitch said last month the BDC sector faces a “deteriorating” outlook as elevated investor redemptions and above-average troubled loans could constrain the liquidity of some BDCs.

(Reporting by Akanksha Khushi in Bengaluru; Editing by Sumana Nandy ​and Rashmi Aich)