
Evergreen Management Under Stress: The Seven Sins in Real Time
- Strategy insight
March 17, 2026 | 3 min read
A Follow-Up to "Overcoming the Seven Sins of Evergreen Investing"
Four of the seven sins we warned about in November showed up in the same quarter.
When we published Overcoming the Seven Sins of Evergreen Investing, we outlined a set of risks we believed the evergreen market would eventually need to confront. We wrote it as practitioners — as a firm that builds and manages evergreen products — not as outside observers.
Four months later, those principles are being pressure-tested across the industry, including for firms like ours. The recent disruption in private credit evergreen funds and the AI-driven repricing of the software sector aren’t abstract risks anymore. They are live. And they map directly to the framework we laid out.
Here’s what we’re seeing in each of those four areas — and what we think it means for anyone allocating to, building, or managing evergreen products today.
Gluttony: Diversification Doesn't Stop at the Portfolio
We originally framed this sin as concentration within the portfolio — too much in one sector, region, or vintage. That still matters. But the recent wave of elevated redemption requests across several large private credit evergreen funds has surfaced a different form of concentration that deserves equal attention: the investor base itself.
In multiple cases, elevated outflows appear to have been driven by a shift in positioning from a single large wealth management platform — a mega-distributor that represented an outsized share of capital across several products. When there is correlation with the underlying investor base of a single distributor, the resulting outflows are far more disruptive than a broad-based, diversified redemption pattern would be.
This is a risk every evergreen manager needs to monitor, ourselves included. Diversification of the capital base — across distribution channels, client types, and geographies — is as important as diversification of the underlying assets. In addition, we believe evergreen managers should seek to enhance stability of capital via soft or hard lock arrangements with institutional investors. A new question for due diligence: what does your manager’s top-five distributor and anchor investor concentration look like as a share of AUM?
Lust: Valuation Governance Meets a Real-World Stress Test
We warned that frequent NAV calculations create inherent pressure around valuation and that independent oversight is essential. That principle is now colliding with a macro development that the entire industry is navigating: AI-driven disruption of the software sector.
Software and technology borrowers represent a meaningful share of many direct lending and BDC portfolios. These are predominantly private positions — valued by managers, not by markets. The February 2026 selloff in SaaS and software-adjacent equities raised a straightforward question: are private marks keeping pace with a rapidly shifting landscape?
This isn’t a risk that lives somewhere else. Software exposure runs through the private markets broadly, including our own portfolios and legacy funds. The differentiator isn’t whether you hold these positions — most managers do. It’s whether your valuation process is governed independently, stress-tested against sector-level disruption, and updated with the rigor that the current environment demands. That’s where we focus our energy, and it’s where we believe allocators should focus their diligence.
Pride: Gates Are the Beginning of the Conversation, Not the End
We wrote that overconfidence is the silent killer of evergreen performance and that liquidity forecasting requires humility. The recent activation of redemption gates across several prominent funds is worth examining — not because gating represents a failure, but because it raises the question every manager must continuously ask: what if this is just the first wave?
Gates are a core feature of evergreen fund design. Their activation during a period of elevated outflows is the mechanism working as intended.
The more important question is what comes next. Does the manager have the liquidity toolkit — the reserves, the credit facilities, the natural cash generation — to absorb a second or third redemption cycle without forced selling or portfolio distortion? Have they stress-tested for correlated outflows (like those seen in times of global crises), not just average conditions?
The honest answer is that distinguishing idiosyncratic from systemic redemptions is difficult in real time. It may be that the current redemption activity is concentrated in a few funds driven by specific distributor dynamics. Or it may be an early signal of broader rebalancing.
The managers who will navigate this best are those who built their liquidity infrastructure for the systemic scenario, even if the idiosyncratic explanation proves correct. This is an ongoing discipline — for every evergreen manager, including us.
Greed: The Fundraising Pace Planted the Seeds
Many of the vehicles now navigating heightened redemption activity are also among those that scaled most aggressively through 2022–2024. The push to reach multi-billion-dollar scale in a single vehicle created conditions that are now becoming visible: deployment pressure, valuation complexity at scale, and capital growth that outpaced diversification of the investor base.
When capital comes in fast from concentrated channels, the conditions for correlated outflows are established well before they materialize. Fundraising discipline — matching the pace of capital raising to organic deployment capacity and investor base diversification — isn’t just a best practice for returns. It’s a structural safeguard for the fund’s resilience.
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Where This Leaves Us
The evergreen structure is not in question. It remains a compelling way to access private markets, and the growth of the category reflects genuine investor demand for more flexible, continuously invested vehicles. What is being tested is the set of practices within the structure — and that test is healthy.
We believe the industry will emerge from this period with stronger norms around distributor diversification, more rigorous valuation governance, and more honest liquidity stress testing. We hold ourselves to the same standard. The seven sins were designed as a practical framework, and we’re applying it to our own business in real time, just as we encourage our partners and allocators to apply it to their manager selection.
The questions we raised in November are more relevant today than when we first asked them. That’s not a victory lap — it’s a reminder that the work is ongoing.
Diversification does not guarantee a profit or protect against loss.
This material is solely for informational purposes and should not be viewed as a current or past recommendation or an offer to sell or the solicitation to buy securities or adopt any investment strategy. The opinions expressed herein represent the current, good faith views of the author(s) at the time of publication, are not definitive investment advice, and should not be relied upon as such. This material has been developed internally and/or obtained from sources believed to be reliable; however, HarbourVest does not guarantee the accuracy, adequacy, or completeness of such information. There is no assurance that any events or projections will occur, and outcomes may be significantly different than the opinions shown here. This information, including any projections concerning financial market performance, is based on current market conditions, which will fluctuate and may be superseded by subsequent market events or for other reasons.




