
NY Common Fund Leans Into Private Markets as Credit Books 9% of Assets
The New York State Common Retirement Fund opened 2026 by directing more than $850 million into private equity, credit and real estate, signaling continued conviction in private markets coming off a 12.5% investment return in 2025. With total assets of roughly $298 billion, the fund is using select manager relationships and bespoke mandates to scale income and total-return strategies.
Credit drew the largest January flows, with $550 million in fresh commitments as the combined credit, absolute return and opportunistic alternatives sleeve grew to 8.9% of plan assets.
The pension allocated $350 million to Apollo Hybrid Value Fund III, a capital solutions strategy seeking equity-style returns with credit downside protection. A second, $200 million fund-of-one mandate went to Kennedy Lewis Investment Management’s KLIM Delta Excelsior Fund, an “all-weather” opportunistic credit vehicle targeting directly originated private loans, first-lien and senior secured paper, and other performing credit.
On the private equity side, the $41 billion program continued to emphasize co-investments and GP-led solutions. Leonard Green & Partners received $150 million for Sage Equity Investors, its continuation fund focused on consumer, business services, healthcare and industrial companies in North America, and a further $150 million to Sage Equity Investors-A, a linked co-investment vehicle. The Sage platform closed in January on $3.6 billion with backing from large public plans, corporate pensions, sovereign wealth funds, endowments, family offices and insurers.
Real estate activity was modest but consistent with a broader tilt toward real assets, which accounted for 14% of system assets, or about $42 billion, at year-end 2025. Officials approved a $2.1 million acquisition of a mixed-use property with residential units in Trumansburg, N.Y., extending the fund’s in-state footprint.
