Former CAIA CEO William J. Kelly Joins Star Mountain Capital

Kelly served as the top official at the Chartered Alternative Investment Analyst Association for 10 years.



Alternative investment manager Star Mountain Capital
announced Thursday that it had named William J. Kelly, the former CEO of the CAIA Association, as a senior adviser. 

Kelly will contribute to Star Mountain’s investor relations, portfolio governance, educational initiatives and thought leadership while the firm scales its alternative investing platform, according to a statement from the firm.

“Bill is a respected voice in the industry with a career focused on raising standards and improving outcomes for investors,” said Brett Hickey, Star Mountain’s founder and CEO, in a statement. “His experience in growing mission-driven organizations and advancing best practices across the alternative investments space will bring meaningful insights to our firm and stakeholders.”

Kelly served as CEO of the Chartered Alternative Investment Analyst Association between January 2014 and December 2024. Kelly had previously served as the CEO of Robeco Investment Management and of Boston Partners Asset Management.

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Star Mountain Capital manages $4 billion in assets across two core strategies: direct investments, made through debt and equity capital in the lower-middle market; and secondary investments. In June, the firm appointed Curtis Glover as CIO.

“Star Mountain is a mission-driven firm, built on values that mirror my own, including integrity, education, and long-term alignment with stakeholders,” Kelly said in a statement. “I am excited to support the continued growth of this exceptional team and platform.”

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Manulife to Acquire 75% of Private Credit Shop for $937.5M

Comvest Credit Partners manages $14.7 billion in assets and would be merged with Manulife’s existing credit platform.

Manulife Financial Corp. is the latest firm to expand its private credit offerings through the acquisition of a specialist asset manager.  

The insurer announced on Wednesday an agreement to acquire a 75% stake in private credit firm Comvest Credit Partners for $937.5 million. The credit manager would be acquired through Manulife’s global wealth and asset management unit, which manages $900 billion in assets.  

Comvest manages $14.7 billion in assets. Manulife plans to combine its existing $3.7 billion credit team with Comvest, creating a private credit platform that manages $18.4 billion. The platform will be rebranded to Manulife | Comvest.  

Comvest, founded in 2006, primarily operates in middle-market nonsponsored direct lending. Sponsor-backed lending makes up the core of Manulife’s existing credit platform. 

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“Manulife’s existing Senior Credit business and Comvest are highly complementary given the different areas of the market they focus upon,” Manulife stated in the announcement.  

The transaction is expected to close in the year’s fourth quarter, subject to regulatory approval. The remaining 25% of shares would be owned by Comvest employees. The deal gives Manulife the option to acquire this remaining 25% stake in the future.  

Michael Falk, Comvest’s co-founder, will assume a role as senior adviser and board member. Robert O’Sullivan, its co-founder and CEO, will be appointed head of the new credit platform. He will report to Anne Valentine Andrews, Manulife’s global head of private markets.  

In Manulife’s August 7 earnings call, Manulife Global WAM President and CEO Paul Lorentz said the acquisition would help scale the firm’s existing private markets platform and help enhance its offerings in private credit.  

“There is significant demand for private credit products today, and by leveraging our global distribution capabilities, we see a significant opportunity to provide our 19 million clients across our retail, retirement, and institutional channels with Comvest’s best-in-class products,” Lorentz said.  

The growth of the private credit market has led asset managers and other investors to acquire credit managers to add the capability to offer the asset class to clients or to bolster their own credit platforms.  

Manulife, in its earnings report, estimated global private credit assets under management will grow to $2.6 trillion in 2029, up from $1.5 trillion in 2023.  

In June, Franklin Templeton announced it would acquire European credit manager Apera ($5.7 billion AUM), in a bid to gain exposure to the lower-middle European credit market. Franklin Templeton had previously acquired private credit managers Benefit Street Partners and Alcentra in 2018 and 2022, respectively.  

In July, Man Group announced an agreement to acquire credit manager Barden Hill ($3 billion), building off of the firm’s 2023 acquisition of Varagon Capital Partners. Also in July, BlackRock closed its $12 billion acquisition of private credit firm HPS Investment Partners ($157 billion) that was announced in December 2024.  

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