Apollo Global Management Faces Scrutiny as AI Disruption Rattles Private Markets
- Apollo Global Management faces renewed scrutiny as AI threatens private‑credit and private‑equity investments.
- Apollo is tightening loan covenants, increasing scenario analyses, and demanding deeper technology due diligence.
- Apollo, active across credit, private equity, and real assets, adapts allocation to preserve returns and deal flow.
Apollo faces fresh scrutiny as AI disruption shakes private markets
Private equity giant Apollo Global Management is confronting renewed scrutiny as investor and analyst concern about artificial intelligence spreads through the private credit and private equity sectors. UBS analysts warn a sizable portion of the private‑credit market is exposed to AI‑related disruption, prompting firms to re‑examine underwriting assumptions and stress‑testing frameworks. For Apollo, whose business model relies heavily on private credit and asset management fees, the industry‑wide reassessment raises questions about portfolio resilience to rapid technological change.
Industry participants say the immediate effect is a shift in risk management and deal diligence rather than wholesale strategy changes. Managers including Apollo are increasing scenario analyses, tightening covenants in new loans, and demanding deeper technology due diligence for companies in software and services. Private equity sponsors are also reassessing hold periods and contingency planning for portfolio companies that face potential AI substitution or accelerated competitive pressures, with a particular focus on customer‑facing software, business services and back‑office automation targets.
The concern is also reshaping capital allocation and product design in the private markets ecosystem. Fund managers are exploring greater diversification across sectors less vulnerable to AI, and are adapting fund documentation to give boards and limited partners clearer transparency on technology risk. For Apollo, which operates across credit, private equity and real assets, these measures aim to preserve return profiles while maintaining access to deal flow in a market that is rapidly pricing AI as a strategic factor.
Critical minerals summit underscores policy shifts
Separately, a U.S. State Department conference bringing miners from 50 countries signals growing geopolitical focus on critical minerals and supply‑chain resilience, as Washington moves forward on plans for a strategic minerals reserve and Europe offers partnership. The gathering boosts attention on miners and materials companies central to battery and clean‑energy supply chains.
Technology sector moves feed broader market anxiety
Meanwhile, developments in the software industry — including a new Anthropic program aimed at smaller law firms — intensify concerns about rapid AI adoption altering competitive dynamics in tech and services. Market reaction highlights how product launches and policy signals together influence corporate risk assessments across private and public markets.
