The diverging fortunes of two private-market heavyweights have come into sharp focus this quarter. While Goldman Sachs sailed through the redemption season without a hitch, Partners Group was forced to slam the brakes on withdrawals from its flagship fund, highlighting the uneven pressures rippling through the private-credit space.
Goldman’s GS Credit vehicle attracted redemption requests of just 3.24% of outstanding shares in the second quarter of 2026 — comfortably below the standard 5% cap — allowing the firm to honour every withdrawal. Fresh inflows of roughly $275 million added further ballast, equivalent to about 3% of the $9.2 billion net asset value at the end of March. Partners Group’s Global Value SICAV, by contrast, saw redemption applications surge to an estimated 9.8% of net asset value, nearly double its 5% quarterly cap, forcing the Swiss asset manager to ration payouts. The $8.6 billion fund was not alone: a Delaware-domiciled vehicle posted requests near 6%, while three other Evergreen funds totalling $9.7 billion saw redemption rates between 3.5% and 5%. The picture is more acute at rivals Ares, Apollo and Morgan Stanley, where private-credit funds faced demands of 12% to 17%, but Partners Group’s performance still trails Goldman’s by a clear margin.
The strain is visible in the stock’s trajectory, though a tentative recovery has taken hold. Shares changed hands at €760.00 on Tuesday, up 1.14% on the day and 10.66% above the 52-week low of €686.80 touched on 26 June 2026. That low came after a brutal slide from the August 2025 peak of €1,213.50, which still leaves the stock 37.37% below the high. Over the past week the equity has gained 3.77%, yet the monthly picture remains negative at minus 2.61%. The 50-day moving average of €828.76 sits 8.30% above the current price, and the 200-day average of €984.39 is a distant 22.79% higher. The relative strength index at 49.4 — neutral territory — and a 30-day annualised volatility of 24.95% suggest the wild swings of recent weeks are abating.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Partners Group?
Analysts see value in the battered valuation. With a forward price-to-earnings ratio of roughly 15.5 for 2026, well below the company’s historical average, some estimate upside of around 30% from current levels. The market capitalisation stands at €19.05 billion, while the underlying earnings power appears intact despite headwinds from investment decisions made in 2021 and subdued portfolio performance.
Partners Group is actively cultivating a new growth leg to offset the drag from outflows in its private-wealth channel. Private Wealth now accounts for about 20% of the roughly $185 billion in assets under management, and the firm is leaning heavily on ELTIF structures — European Long-Term Investment Funds — to democratise access to private equity. One such product, co-launched with Erste Asset Management, allows retail investors to enter with a minimum of €10,000. The strategy is gaining traction industry-wide: assets held in ELTIF vehicles surged 55% to €34 billion. Management stands by its 2026 gross fundraising target of $26 billion to $32 billion, though net growth is being trimmed by 1 to 2 percentage points due to redemptions from Evergreen structures. Institutional investors, representing 80% of AuM, remain a stable base.
All eyes are now on the assets-under-management report scheduled for the 30 June 2026 cut-off. The data will reveal whether institutional inflows can compensate for the outflow pressure in the retail segment and, crucially, whether the gap to Goldman Sachs can narrow in future quarters. For a stock that has lost more than a third of its value in twelve months but is showing signs of stabilisation, the next few weeks will be decisive.
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