Marathon Asset Management
Marathon Asset Management, L.P. is a New York-based global investment manager founded in 1998 by Bruce Richards and Lou Hanover, specializing in public and private credit markets across various asset classes including direct lending, healthcare finance, and opportunistic credit.[1] The firm manages over $24 billion in assets under management while having invested more than $250 billion since inception, emphasizing rigorous risk management and deep specialization to deliver investment results.[1] Marathon's investment approach is grounded in teamwork, intellectual integrity, and real-time collaboration among its over 190 professionals, including more than 95 investment experts who navigate complex credit opportunities in global markets.[1] Key strategies involve robust data-driven analysis and a focus on downside protection, enabling the firm to capitalize on distressed and opportunistic credit situations.[1] Notable milestones include surpassing $20 billion in assets under management in 2021 and being selected by the U.S. Treasury in 2009 for the Public-Private Investment Program to address legacy asset challenges from the financial crisis.[1] In 2024, Marathon celebrated over 26 years of operations and launched an expanded multi-asset credit program, underscoring its evolution in the credit investment landscape.[1] The firm faced a minor regulatory matter in 2024 when the SEC charged it with inadequate policies to prevent misuse of material nonpublic information, resulting in a $1.5 million penalty settlement without admission of wrongdoing.[2]
Founding and Organization
Establishment and Key Founders
Marathon Asset Management was founded in 1998 in New York City by Bruce Richards and Lou Hanover as a credit-focused investment firm.[3] The firm commenced operations with initial capital of $17 million from a single investor, emphasizing opportunities in debt securities and structured credit markets.[4] Richards, who had accumulated 15 years of experience in debt securities prior to the founding, serves as CEO and Chairman, overseeing strategic direction.[4] Lou Hanover, co-founder and Chief Investment Officer, contributed complementary expertise in credit investments, shaping the firm's early focus on public and private credit strategies.[3] Both founders possessed extensive industry backgrounds, with Richards holding a B.A. in Economics, summa cum laude, from Tulane University and membership in Phi Beta Kappa.[5] The establishment of Marathon as a limited liability company reflected a deliberate structure to manage alternative credit investments, distinguishing it from traditional asset managers.[6]Corporate Structure and Assets Under Management
Marathon Asset Management operates as a limited partnership, with Marathon Asset Management GP, L.L.C. acting as the general partner; the managing members of this entity are co-founders Bruce Richards, who serves as CEO and Chairman, and Lou Hanover.[7][3] The firm, established in 1998 as a Delaware limited liability company before evolving into its current partnership structure, remains privately held with ownership concentrated among its managing partners and internal leadership, all of whom have been promoted from within.[8][3] This setup emphasizes centralized control by experienced credit specialists, supporting a fully integrated platform for investment decisions across global markets.[1] Headquartered at One Bryant Park in New York City, the firm maintains a global footprint with additional offices in Miami and Los Angeles (United States), London (United Kingdom), and Luxembourg, facilitating operations in developed and emerging credit markets.[1][6] It employs over 190 professionals, including more than 95 investment personnel and 90 institutional infrastructure staff, with an average team tenure exceeding 25 years in credit and risk management.[1][3] Marathon has been registered as an investment adviser with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission since 2003, overseeing approximately 750 limited partners and deploying over 10 specialized credit strategies.[1] As of September 2025, Marathon manages more than $24 billion in discretionary assets under management, concentrated in public and private credit instruments such as distressed debt, asset-based lending, and structured finance.[1][9] This figure reflects growth from prior years, including expansions in opportunistic credit funds, though exact totals are not publicly disclosed beyond regulatory filings that capture only partial 13F holdings.[10] The firm's AUM supports a client base of over 100 institutional investors, with capital allocated across hedge funds, separate accounts, and private vehicles focused on downside protection and cycle-tested returns.[10][1]Investment Strategies and Philosophy
Core Approaches in Credit Markets
Marathon Asset Management employs a multifaceted approach to credit markets, emphasizing opportunistic investments in distressed and special situations debt, where it identifies undervalued securities of financially troubled companies through rigorous fundamental analysis. This strategy involves acquiring corporate bonds, loans, and other debt instruments at discounts, anticipating recoveries via restructurings, liquidations, or operational turnarounds, often executed through dedicated private funds.[2][11] The firm's expertise in this area stems from a bottom-up credit selection process that prioritizes downside protection and asymmetric risk-reward profiles, leveraging a team of over 30 professionals focused on distressed opportunities.[12] In public credit markets, Marathon pursues multi-asset solutions that integrate flexibility and customization, targeting consistent returns across economic cycles via dynamic allocation among high-yield bonds, leveraged loans, and structured products. This "all-weather" framework adapts to market volatility by balancing income generation with capital appreciation potential, often partnering with institutional clients to tailor exposures.[13] Complementing this, the firm's structured credit strategy applies fundamental underwriting to asset-backed securities and collateralized loan obligations (CLOs), employing quantitative models alongside qualitative assessments to optimize portfolio construction and mitigate tail risks.[14][15] Private credit forms another pillar, where Marathon provides direct origination of tailored financing solutions, including asset-based lending (ABL) and growth capital for middle-market companies facing liquidity constraints or refinancing needs. These interventions emphasize creative structuring to align with borrowers' operational realities, drawing on the firm's incumbency in private markets to secure senior positions with robust covenants and collateral.[16] In emerging markets credit, the approach extends to resilient sovereign and corporate issuers, focusing on selective opportunities amid macroeconomic shifts, with an emphasis on currency-hedged exposures to preserve capital.[17] Overall, these methods underscore a philosophy of risk-adjusted returns through proprietary research and opportunistic positioning, avoiding broad market beta in favor of idiosyncratic value creation.[18][19]Risk Management and All-Weather Tactics
Marathon Asset Management's risk management framework, refined since its founding in 1998, prioritizes downside protection through disciplined transaction structuring, thoughtful capital deployment, and cycle-tested market intelligence.[18] This approach integrates real-time data sharing, fundamental analysis, and oversight by dedicated risk committees to mitigate exposures in volatile credit markets, particularly in distressed and opportunistic investments.[1] The firm employs rigorous credit selection processes, emphasizing senior secured positions backed by high-quality collateral, financial covenants, and in-house monitoring teams to ensure robust cash flows and principal preservation.[20] Central to these efforts are all-weather tactics designed to deliver resilient performance across economic cycles, characterized by low correlation to broader markets and adaptability to varying interest rate and credit environments. In asset-based lending, Marathon constructs highly diversified portfolios spanning loans, leases, receivables, and specialized assets like maritime vessels (over 450 million deadweight tons) and aircraft, leveraging a flexible mandate to capture value through-cycle while maintaining strong debt-service coverage.[20] [21] This strategy, managing over $30 billion in investments with teams averaging 25 years of experience, focuses on non-correlated senior secured cash flows to generate absolute returns independent of market direction.[20] In public and structured credit, all-weather capabilities stem from dynamic asset allocation informed by quantitative models, efficient frontier analysis, and proprietary machine learning tools like "m2PT," which forecast cash flows and stress-test scenarios using a 30-year loan database.[14] The multi-asset credit program combines high-yield bonds, leveraged loans, collateralized loan obligations, and emerging market debt, employing active management with global macro overlays and sector-specific insights to optimize risk-adjusted yields and balance income generation against capital preservation.[13] These tactics underscore a philosophy of portfolio optimization that minimizes historical volatility while pursuing alpha, as evidenced by integrated public-private credit teams sharing nuanced data for enhanced decision-making.[1]Historical Development
Inception and Early Growth (1998–2007)
Marathon Asset Management was established on January 2, 1998, by Bruce Richards and Louis Hanover as Richards Hanover Asset Management, which was renamed Marathon Asset Management later that year.[22] The firm commenced operations with $17 million in assets under management, including $10 million from the founders' personal investments, concentrating initially on emerging markets debt and global credit opportunities.[22] Amid the Asian financial crisis, its Marathon Master Fund achieved breakeven performance in 1998.[22] In 1999, the Master Fund delivered a 25.5% return, while the newly launched Marathon Special Opportunity Fund, targeting high-yield bonds, bank debt, and distressed securities, generated an 83% gain.[22] The firm expanded its product offerings with the Global Convertible Fund in 2001, which exceeded 20% returns in its debut year, and the Structured Finance Fund in 2002.[22] By 2002, assets under management reached $1 billion, prompting the opening of a London office to support international operations.[1] Subsequent years marked diversification into private credit strategies, including the launch of an asset-based lending approach and real estate finance in 2004, followed by transportation finance and the firm's first collateralized loan obligation in 2005.[1] Marathon registered as an investment adviser with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in 2003 after acquiring its initial non-performing loan portfolio.[1] In 2005–2006, the firm acquired Refco's European operations, rebranding them as Marex Financial to bolster structured finance capabilities.[22] Healthcare finance was introduced in 2006.[1] By 2007, Marathon had surpassed $10 billion in assets under management across its hedge funds, with the flagship Special Opportunity Fund at $3.1 billion and the Structured Finance Fund at $1.7 billion, alongside $3 billion in leveraged finance for a total approaching $13.7 billion.[22] That year, it launched a structured credit closed-end fund and raised over $600 million for the Marathon Distressed Subprime Fund.[1][22]Global Financial Crisis and Government Partnerships (2008–2012)
Amid the 2008 global financial crisis, Marathon Asset Management, a specialist in credit markets and distressed debt, identified opportunities in dislocated assets, actively purchasing beaten-up securities as liquidity evaporated and prices plummeted.[23] The firm's co-founders, Louis Hanover and Bruce Richards, expressed frustration over the subprime meltdown's impact on market access, yet Marathon's focus on opportunistic credit enabled it to navigate the downturn effectively, avoiding the severe losses that afflicted many peers in related strategies.[22] Internal accounts highlight the firm's resilience, with key personnel contributing to sustained operations through the crisis period.[24] In March 2009, the U.S. Department of the Treasury launched the Public-Private Investment Program (PPIP) to stabilize markets by facilitating private capital inflows into legacy toxic assets, including residential and commercial mortgage-backed securities (RMBS and CMBS).[25] Marathon was selected on July 13, 2009, as one of nine fund managers for the Legacy Securities component, leveraging its structured credit expertise to form the Marathon Legacy Securities Public-Private Investment Partnership, L.P.[26] This selection underscored Marathon's track record in distressed investments, positioning it to partner with the government in acquiring illiquid assets from banks and institutions at potentially discounted valuations.[14] Marathon completed the initial closing of its PPIP fund on November 30, 2009, raising private equity that Treasury matched on a dollar-for-dollar basis, with total private commitments across PPIP funds reaching approximately $5.07 billion by that point.[27][28] The Treasury committed $474.55 million in equity and $949 million in non-recourse debt to Marathon's fund, formalized by July 17, 2010, enabling up to $1.42 billion in disbursements for asset purchases by December 31, 2011.[29] In collaboration with minority-owned firm Blaylock Robert Van, LLC, the fund targeted long-term holdings of eligible legacy securities to generate returns through market recovery.[27][30] From 2010 through 2012, the fund executed investments in RMBS and CMBS portfolios totaling around $1.5 billion in holdings, with ongoing transactions reflected in periodic payments to Treasury, including $1.08 million in interest on January 17, 2012, and $31.2 million in dividends on April 13, 2012.[29] These distributions demonstrated early value creation amid stabilizing credit conditions, aligning with PPIP's goal of bridging public financing with private management to decongest balance sheets and restore market liquidity.[25] Marathon's involvement marked a pivotal government partnership, enhancing its profile in structured credit while contributing to broader crisis mitigation efforts without reported operational disruptions.[31]Expansion and Specialization (2013–Present)
Following the global financial crisis and involvement in government-backed programs, Marathon Asset Management pursued diversification into specialized credit strategies, launching dedicated funds targeting niche opportunities in private and public markets. In 2014, the firm introduced its Asset-Based Lending Fund (MSPS), focusing on financing secured by tangible assets such as transportation equipment and real estate.[1] This marked an early step in expanding beyond traditional distressed debt into asset-backed opportunities, aligning with the firm's emphasis on collateralized investments to mitigate downside risk. Subsequent years saw accelerated product development and geographic reach. By 2015, Marathon launched a CLO Equity Fund to capitalize on collateralized loan obligations and an Emerging Markets Optimal Beta Fund to pursue high-conviction debt in developing economies.[1] In 2016, a Dedicated Global High Yield Fund was established, broadening exposure to corporate bonds worldwide, while 2017 brought the Aircraft Leasing Fund, specializing in aviation finance amid recovering industry demand.[1] These initiatives contributed to assets under management surpassing $15 billion by 2018, reflecting inflows from institutional investors drawn to the firm's track record in credit selection.[1] Specialization deepened in healthcare and opportunistic credit by 2019, with the launch of a Healthcare Finance Fund targeting biopharma royalties and structured life sciences transactions, alongside the inaugural Marathon Distressed Credit Fund (MDCF) for event-driven opportunities.[1] In April 2021, the firm expanded its healthcare team to enhance capabilities in these areas, amid AUM growth exceeding $20 billion.[1][32] By 2022, Marathon partnered with John Hancock Investments to introduce the Asset-Based Lending Fund (ABLFX), providing retail access to its asset-secured lending strategy, and launched an ESG-benchmarked emerging markets mandate to address evolving investor preferences without compromising yield focus.[1] Recent developments underscore further maturation in alternative credit. In 2023, Marathon appointed leadership for its European Alternative Credit business to bolster regional private debt origination.[33] Leadership promotions in emerging markets debt followed in May 2024, alongside a multi-asset credit program and a middle-market lending partnership with Webster Bank, enhancing direct lending capabilities.[1][34] Assets under management reached over $24 billion by late 2024.[1] In March 2025, the firm closed its second opportunistic credit fund, MDCF II, at $2.7 billion, exceeding targets through commitments from existing and new limited partners, while broadening access to its asset-based lending strategy via the iCapital Marketplace platform in September 2025.[35][36][37] This period reflects a strategic shift toward scalable, specialized platforms in private credit, leveraging proprietary origination and risk controls to navigate volatile markets.Performance Metrics and Notable Investments
Public-Private Investment Program Outcomes
Marathon Asset Management participated in the U.S. Treasury's Public-Private Investment Program (PPIP) Legacy Securities component through its Marathon Legacy Securities Public-Private Investment Partnership, L.P., approved in 2009.[25] The fund raised approximately $400 million in initial private equity capital by November 2009, which was matched on a one-to-one basis by Treasury equity investments, enabling leveraged purchases of legacy residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) and commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS).[28] Overall, the PPIP allocated $1.42 billion in total disbursements to the fund, comprising private and public capital.[29] The fund delivered strong performance, achieving a net internal rate of return (IRR) of 24.6% to 24.8% since inception through targeted investments in distressed securities that appreciated as markets recovered post-financial crisis.[38][39] This ranked third among PPIP managers, behind Oaktree Capital Management's 26.3% IRR and another fund at 24.8%, reflecting effective asset selection and timing in a high-risk environment.[38] The Treasury realized a 25% return on its equity portion, structured as a preferred return ahead of private investors, with total repayments matching disbursements at $1.42 billion and generating $400 million in government revenue, equivalent to the program's profit share.[38][29] Liquidation occurred in August 2013, ahead of the PPIP's broader wind-down, allowing Marathon to exit positions profitably as legacy asset prices stabilized and liquidity improved.[38] The outcomes validated Marathon's credit expertise in navigating illiquid markets, contributing to the PPIP's goal of restarting private capital flows into toxic assets without taxpayer losses, though critics noted the program's selective manager approvals favored established firms.[27] No material losses were reported for the fund, underscoring its role in deleveraging banks during recovery.[29]Distressed and Opportunistic Credit Funds
Marathon Asset Management's distressed and opportunistic credit funds target investments in dislocated credit, distressed exchanges, bankruptcy reorganizations, and debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing, aiming to provide creative capital solutions for companies undergoing transitions or facing cyclical challenges despite underlying growth potential.[12] The strategy emphasizes a non-litigious, partnership-oriented approach, drawing on fundamental analysis, collaboration with private equity sponsors, and a dedicated team of over 30 opportunistic credit professionals supported by a 90-person global infrastructure group for rigorous underwriting and value creation.[12] Since the firm's founding in 1998, it has deployed over $75 billion in opportunistic credit capital across more than 3,000 analyzed securities, focusing on secondary markets, turnaround financing, and restructurings to generate superior risk-adjusted returns.[12] The flagship vehicles include the Marathon Distressed Credit Fund series. MDCF I, a closed-end fund, achieved final close in 2020 with approximately $2.5 billion in commitments, investing in stressed and distressed situations such as recapitalizations, DIP financings, and exit financings.[40] [41] This predecessor fund delivered top-quartile distributions to paid-in capital (DPI) of 65% as of its successor's launch.[35] MDCF II followed with a final close on March 20, 2025, raising $2.7 billion including affiliated and co-investment vehicles, targeting direct origination of private capital opportunities in both public and private markets to support management teams, sponsors, and founders navigating volatility.[35] These funds also utilize flexible fund-of-one structures for tailored deployments.[12]| Fund | Vintage/Close | Commitments | Key Performance/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| MDCF I | 2020 | $2.5 billion | Top-quartile DPI of 65%; focused on restructurings and DIP financing.[35] [40] |
| MDCF II | March 2025 | $2.7 billion | Emphasizes partnership capital in dislocated environments; builds on prior track record.[35] |