
NAV BDCs Deliver Nearly $5.9B in Q2 Liquidity Despite Elevated Redemptions
NAV BDC sponsors delivered nearly $5.9 billion in liquidity to investors in the second quarter of 2026, bringing year-to-date redemptions met to more than $12.7 billion, according to Robert A. Stanger & Co. The figures, drawn from approximately 99% of the market, reflect the semi-liquid vehicle structure absorbing historically elevated redemption pressure without forcing distressed asset sales inside the funds.
Stanger frames the redemption activity not as a sign of structural failure but as evidence of investors rebalancing their portfolios — moving out of private credit and into what the firm calls HALO strategies, or hard assets with low obsolescence, including real estate and infrastructure, which have seen fundraising surge in parallel.

“What we’re watching is a rotation, not a retreat, with investors rebalancing out of credit and into HALO strategies. The semi-liquid structure allows them to do so on defined terms, protecting the investors who want to stay without forcing distressed sales inside the fund. That’s the mechanism working exactly as intended,” Kevin T. Gannon, chairman and CEO, Robert A. Stanger & Co.
The data adds context to a quarter in which major non-traded BDC sponsors, including Ares, Morgan Stanley, Apollo, and Blackstone, all reported redemption requests exceeding their 5% quarterly caps and fulfilled withdrawals on a pro-rata basis. Stanger’s aggregate view suggests the system-wide stress is manageable within the structure’s existing guardrails.

