While retail investors violently pull their money out of private credit funds, the true whales of Wall Street are refusing to flinch. Major North American pension funds are publicly standing by their private credit allocations, proving that “patient capital” is the ultimate bedrock of the $2 trillion industry.
💰 THE METRICS (The Patient Capital):
- The Giant Holds the Line: CalSTRS (a $402 billion system) is the biggest investor in Blue Owl’s publicly traded BDC. Despite Blue Owl gating retail redemptions last week, CalSTRS reaffirmed its commitment to its long-term private credit strategy.
- Doubling Down: Arizona’s Public Safety Personnel Retirement System (PSPRS) currently has 17% of its assets in private credit and is actively aiming to increase that to 20%.
- The Broad Anchor: Data shows multiple Kentucky pension systems holding roughly 20% of their assets in private credit, while the State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio (STRS Ohio) is maintaining a solid 10% allocation.
⚖️ THE MACRO CATALYST (Retail Flight vs. Institutional Might):
- The Liquidity Mismatch: The current stress in private credit is largely driven by jittery retail investors panicking over AI software disruption and falling returns. Pension funds, on the other hand, do not need daily or quarterly liquidity. They are structured to operate on decades-long timelines.
- The Looming Shakeout: Pension CIOs aren’t blind to the risks. Arizona’s Steed bluntly noted that the trillions pouring into private credit recently “got out of hand,” increasing competition and lowering underwriting standards. They are fully expecting a market shakeout.
- The Selective Advantage: Savvy pension funds are now pivoting to credit managers who raise modest amounts of capital, allowing them to be highly selective when underwriting loans and negotiating strict creditor rights.
💡 THE BOTTOM LINE: The private credit sky isn’t falling; it is just shedding its weak hands. Retail money treats illiquid loans like day-tradeable tech stocks, leading to inevitable liquidity gating. Institutional pension funds treat them as long-term income generators designed to pay out retirees in 2040. As long as the multi-billion-dollar pension pillar holds strong, the private credit industry will weather this storm—but the era of reckless, zero-diligence underwriting is officially over.
