24 June 2026Markets & Economy
Morgan Stanley caps a private credit fund after 11.6 percent of investors tried to exit at once
An 11.6 percent redemption request against a private credit fund is not a run, but it is close enough to make the gate mechanism do real work. Morgan Stanley imposing caps confirms what the FCA and Bank of England have been warning about for two years: illiquid assets packaged into semi-liquid structures create a queue problem the moment sentiment shifts. The mechanism is straightforward. Private credit loans cannot be sold quickly at par, so when redemptions exceed available cash, the manager either gates, forces asset sales at a discount, or dilutes remaining investors. All three outcomes are worse than the headline yield suggested. For UK pension schemes and wealth managers who have increased private credit allocations over the past three years, this is the practical test of whether their liquidity modelling was honest.
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