CLO Manager Rankings and Evaluation

Manager quality is the single most important variable determining CLO performance, particularly for equity investors. Tier 1 managers outperform Tier 3/4 managers by 300-500 bps in equity IRRs over full cycle. This guide explains how to evaluate manager quality, interpret industry rankings, and identify key performance indicators that separate elite from mediocre CLO managers.

Why Manager Quality Matters

Performance Dispersion by Manager Tier

Equity IRRs by Manager Tier (2010-2024 avg):

Manager Tier Avg Equity IRR Range (25th-75th %ile) 2008-2009 Vintage IRR
Tier 1 15.8% 14.2-17.5% 8-10%
Tier 2 13.5% 11.8-15.2% 5-7%
Tier 3 11.2% 9.5-13.0% 2-5%
Tier 4 9.5% 6.8-11.8% 0-3% (some losses)

Key insight: Tier 1 managers outperform Tier 4 by 630 bps annually. Over 10-year CLO life, this compounds to 90% cumulative return difference.

Why Performance Varies So Much

The Industry Tier System

Tier 1 Managers ($15B+ AUM)

Elite managers with 15+ year track records, institutional platforms, and top-quartile performance across multiple credit cycles.

Manager CLO AUM (2024) # of Active CLOs First CLO Survived 2008?
Blackstone Credit $35B 50+ 2006 Yes
Oak Hill Advisors $28B 45+ 2000 Yes
PGIM (Prudential) $26B 40+ 2002 Yes
Carlyle Global Credit $24B 38+ 2005 Yes
Ares Management $22B 35+ 2004 Yes
CIFC Asset Management $21B 32+ 2003 Yes
Apollo Credit Management $19B 30+ 2007 Yes
Benefit Street Partners $18B 28+ 2009 N/A (post-crisis)

Tier 2 Managers ($5-15B AUM)

Strong regional or specialist managers with solid track records but less scale:

Tier 3 Managers ($1-5B AUM)

Emerging managers or niche specialists:

Tier 4 Managers (<$1B AUM)

First-time issuers or very small platforms:

Key Performance Metrics

1. Equity IRRs by Vintage

Most important single metric. Compare manager's vintages to industry average:

Vintage Year Tier 1 Avg IRR Industry Avg IRR Tier 1 Advantage
2007-2008 (Crisis) 8-10% 5-7% +250 bps
2010-2013 (Recovery) 18-22% 15-18% +300 bps
2014-2019 (Mature) 14-17% 12-15% +200 bps
2020-2022 (COVID+) 14-17% (projected) 12-14% (projected) +250 bps

2. Portfolio Default Rates

Lower default rates = better credit selection and monitoring:

Manager Tier Avg Default Rate (2010-2024) 2008-2009 Peak Interpretation
Tier 1 2.5% 7.8% Best credit selection; active monitoring
Tier 2 3.0% 9.2% Solid but not elite
Tier 3 3.5% 11.0% Below average credit discipline
Industry Avg 3.2% 9.8% Benchmark

3. Trading Activity and Turnover

Optimal turnover rate: 25-40% annually during reinvestment period

4. OC Test Cushions

How much cushion manager maintains above minimum OC test levels:

Manager Quality Typical AAA OC Ratio Cushion Above Trigger (130%) Interpretation
Excellent 135-138% 5-8 points Conservative; high credit quality
Good 132-135% 2-5 points Balanced approach
Mediocre 130-132% 0-2 points Tight management; risk of test failure
Poor <130% Negative (failing test) Cash diversion triggered; equity distributions cease

5. CCC Exposure Management

How managers handle distressed credits:

Due Diligence Framework

Quantitative Analysis

Historical Performance (30% weight):

Portfolio Metrics (30% weight):

Scale and Resources (20% weight):

Structural Factors (20% weight):

Qualitative Analysis

Red Flags to Avoid

Where to Find Manager Data

Public Sources

Subscription Services

Manager Selection Checklist

Factor Tier 1 Standard Minimum Acceptable
CLO AUM $15B+ $5B+
Years Operating 15+ years 7+ years
Equity IRRs (avg) 15%+ (cycle avg) 12%+ (cycle avg)
2008-2009 Vintage IRR 8-10% 5%+
Default Rate (2010-2024) < 2.8% < 3.5%
OC Test Failures < 5% of deals < 15% of deals
Manager Equity Retention 20-50% 10%+
CCC Exposure 3-5% < 7%

Key Takeaways

Learn more about CLO market participants →

Understand CLO equity investing →