Redwood Capital Management seeks $1 billion for illiquid credit investment fund
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · Apr 27
Redwood Capital Management seeks $1 billion for illiquid credit investment fund
4 articles · Updated · Bloomberg · Apr 27
The new fund aims to invest in long-term, illiquid credit assets and is designed for continuous deployment rather than only during market dislocations.
Redwood, which manages over $10 billion, is responding to increasingly complex debt restructurings that require longer investment horizons.
The fund targets investors seeking exposure to credit opportunities arising from extended restructuring processes and market shifts, reflecting a broader trend toward alternative credit strategies.
With a $480B maturity wall looming, is Redwood's new fund a rescue boat or a risky bet?
Are 'evergreen' funds the solution to private credit illiquidity or the next trap for investors?
Is the pivot to Asset-Based Finance a safer haven than traditional corporate direct lending?
Why are giants like PIMCO sounding the alarm on direct lending while others double down?
Will new AIFMD 2 regulations effectively tame the 'Wild West' of private credit lending?
Could hidden risks in the $2.1T private credit market trigger a wider financial shock?