- DoubleLine Capital CEO Jeffrey Gundlach publicly accused financial advisers of steering retail clients into private credit and semi-liquid funds primarily for the high fees — not their clients’ benefit.
- Gundlach called the “semi-liquid” fund label “diabolical,” saying the products are liquid when investors don’t need cash and illiquid precisely when they do.
- He compared private credit’s current boom to the dot-com and mortgage-backed securities cycles, warning flatly: “People are going to lose money here.”
- The asset class is already grappling with a wave of redemption requests as retail investors — realizing they may be “the bag-holder” — scramble for the exits.
What Happened?
Speaking at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, DoubleLine Capital CEO Jeffrey Gundlach delivered a pointed indictment of how private credit products were marketed and sold to individual investors. He argued that financial intermediaries failed to adequately explain gating mechanisms — which restrict withdrawals — and that the opaque nature of these products left investors unaware of the risks they were taking on. His remarks come as redemption requests are surging across the private credit industry, rattling a sector that had viewed retail capital as its next growth frontier.
Why It Matters?
Gundlach manages nearly $100 billion at DoubleLine, giving his warnings significant credibility. The private credit market has ballooned to over $2 trillion globally, with a major push in recent years to sell these products to mass-market investors through wealth management channels. If Gundlach is right — and the historical parallels to dot-com and mortgage markets hold — the unwind could be messy. Unlike public markets, private credit losses don’t show up in real time, meaning the damage may be hidden until it’s severe.
What’s Next?
Regulators are already scrutinizing the retail private credit market, and Gundlach’s public broadside adds pressure for greater disclosure requirements. Watch for further investor redemption data from major private credit managers, any regulatory action on semi-liquid fund structures, and whether other high-profile investors echo Gundlach’s warnings. The industry’s damage-control response at Milken — where some private credit titans took partial blame for skittish retail buyers — suggests the reputational hit is already landing.
Source: Bloomberg











