Ares Management is structuring its next flagship US direct lending vehicle at a materially smaller size than the $33.6 billion fund it closed in 2022, according to people familiar with the planning. The firm has not disclosed target sizing, but internal discussions point to a fund in the $20 billion to $25 billion range, representing a deliberate step back from the record-setting pace that defined private credit fundraising through the zero-rate era.
The decision reflects two operational realities. First, deployment speed. Ares wants capital working faster in a market where borrowers are refinancing at higher rates and lenders can extract better terms without needing to warehouse dry powder for eighteen months. Second, leverage. The firm is signaling lower fund-level borrowing relative to committed equity, a quiet acknowledgment that the easy math of levering cheap credit at 200 basis points over SOFR no longer pencils the same way at 550 basis points over. The previous fund leaned into subscription lines and NAV facilities to goose IRRs during the deployment phase. That playbook is now expensive.
What this means for allocators: Ares is not retreating. It is repricing risk and recalibrating return expectations in a market that still has $1.4 trillion in private credit AUM, according to Preqin data through Q4 2024. The firm manages over $470 billion across credit strategies, and its direct lending platform remains the largest in the US by committed capital. But smaller fund sizes force discipline on deal selection, and they reduce the pressure to deploy into marginal credits just to hit vintage-year targets. If Ares is pulling back on fund-level leverage, LPs should expect gross returns to compress by 100 to 150 basis points unless the firm can source deals with materially higher spreads or better structural protections. That is possible—middle-market borrowers are paying SOFR plus 550 to 650 basis points today, up from 400 to 500 in 2021—but it requires Ares to say no more often.
The broader signal is one of maturation. Private credit spent a decade growing faster than its ability to institutionalize risk management, and the last two years have exposed that gap. Default rates in US direct lending ticked up to 2.1% in 2024 from 1.3% in 2022, per Cliffwater. Covenant-lite structures that worked in a falling-rate environment now look like landmines. Ares is choosing to raise less, deploy faster, and use less leverage because the math of the next five years does not resemble the math of the last five. Other managers will follow. Apollo and Blackstone have both signaled slower fundraising cadences for their flagship credit vehicles, and Blue Owl recently closed a direct lending fund at $13.5 billion, well below initial whisper targets of $18 billion.
Operators and allocators should watch three things. First, whether Ares adjusts management fees or hurdle rates on the new fund to reflect the lower leverage profile—fee structures built for levered returns do not translate cleanly to unlevered portfolios. Second, how quickly the firm moves to first close, likely in Q2 or Q3 2025, which will indicate LP appetite for a more conservative product in a market still awash with capital. Third, whether Ares begins offering separately managed accounts or co-investment vehicles to give larger LPs direct exposure without the fund-level leverage layer. That would be a structural shift and a concession that the one-size-fits-all mega-fund model has limits.
The fact that matters: Ares is not waiting for a private credit correction to adjust its strategy. It is repricing its flagship product in real time, and that makes it the first mover in what will be a multi-year recalibration across the entire asset class.