Private Markets, Software Repricing, and the Paradigm Shift in Capital Allocation · Marc Rowan
2026-06-11 · A faithful, transcript-grounded reading by PodLens
Original episode:https://youtu.be/oYK_MmZW9XI?si=hgCJrdqPP-KSgc4a · Timestamps are clickable — they seek the player in place
Private MarketsSoftware RepricingCapital AllocationRetirement ServicesCredit MarketsOrganizational Culture
What This Episode Is About
This conversation features Marc Rowan, co-founder and CEO of Apollo Global Management, in discussion with a16z. Marc Rowan shares deep insights into the rise of private markets, the paradigm shift in fixed income and credit assets, the repricing risks of artificial intelligence on enterprise software valuations (Software Repricing), and the capital and cultural development of modern financial institutions. Marc Rowan reflects on his career beginnings at Drexel Burnham Lambert and the historical details of founding Apollo in 1990, analyzing the risks of "heart attacks" (funding risk) and "cancer" (accumulation of bad debt) faced by financial institutions across different cycles. He further elucidates Apollo's transition path from a traditional private equity firm to a trillion-dollar new-type financial institution centered on Investment Grade Credit and retirement services (Athene). Finally, Marc Rowan shares his practical approach to Moral Leadership and how to sustain Apollo's innovative DNA and humanistic culture during expansion through "Clean Sheet Thinking" and "Playing to Win."
Timeline Topic Map
- [00:00-00:53]: Introduction and Core Background. Discusses the high concentration risk in the top ten US stocks and the fixed income market, pointing out that private markets are the only channel for investors to achieve diversified allocation, and highlights the explosion of investments in data centers, chips, and energy in the AI era.
- [00:54-01:43]: Career Beginnings at Drexel (1984). Rowan shares his journey of joining Drexel after graduating from Wharton, noting that Drexel focused on serving entrepreneurs and non-investment-grade companies, requiring practitioners to have the ability to go deep into the business fundamentals rather than relying solely on financial engineering.
- [01:44-03:07]: Innovation Soil and the Early Financial Market at Drexel. Recalls the blank slate before the birth of modern credit instruments like high-yield bonds and leveraged loans, emphasizing how "clean sheet thinking" led to the invention of PIK (payment-in-kind) bonds, highly confident letters, and bridge loans.
- [03:08-04:47]: Lessons Learned from Mentor Michael Milken. Discusses the urgency of solving hard problems, the business-first principle, and the ability to integrate geopolitical, technological, and capital market information to "connect the dots," pointing out that one must "either embrace change or be consumed by it."
- [04:48-06:06]: The Birth of Apollo and Analysis of Why Financial Institutions Die (1990). Founded Apollo after the sudden collapse of Drexel. Rowan proposes two causes of death for financial service institutions: "heart attacks" (liquidity/funding risk of borrowing short and lending long) and "cancer" (long-term accumulation of bad debt assets).
- [06:07-07:26]: Capital Accumulation During the Crédit Lyonnais Era. Recalls how, during the 1990 global financial and real estate crisis, the Apollo team secured their first $800 million in capital from the French state-owned bank Crédit Lyonnais, which quickly expanded to $6 billion, becoming its largest profit center.
- [07:27-08:44]: French Industrial Restructuring and the Pinault Family Buy-in. Relates the anecdote of Apollo being sold to François Pinault after the collapse of Crédit Lyonnais, and Apollo's gradual diversification of funding sources to US, European, and international institutions.
- [08:45-09:53]: Apollo's Asset Structure Truth. Clarifies the misconception of Apollo as a PE giant, pointing out that of its trillion-dollar AUM, 80% of assets are in credit (mostly investment-grade credit), with the remaining 20% distributed across hybrid equity and traditional PE funds.
- [09:54-11:26]: Public Market Concentration Risk and the Trend Toward Privatization. Points out that nearly 50% of the S&P 500's weight is concentrated in 10 tech stocks, and the fixed income market is also consolidating around a few banks and tech giants, emphasizing the core value of private markets in avoiding public market concentration risks and capturing unlisted high-growth tech companies (such as Anthropic, OpenAI, SpaceX, Cognition, Cursor).
- [11:27-13:26]: The AUM Trap and Apollo's "Originate-to-Distribute" Model. Contrasts traditional asset managers' ability to instantly deploy in public markets, pointing out that Apollo is rigidly constrained by its origination capacity; emphasizes Apollo's co-investment as a principal to ensure alignment with client interests, and explores the capital value of guaranteeing outcomes in times of change.
- [13:27-18:49]: Democratization of Private Markets and Daily Valuation Reform. Deconstructs the conflict between the drawdown model and public market liquidity expectations when expanding into five new markets, including individuals, insurance, and traditional asset management; announces that Apollo's investment-grade private suite products will achieve Daily Estimated Value by June 30, and expand to all credit businesses by the end of September, aiming to establish standardized information and a market-maker ecosystem.
- [18:50-22:01]: Mental Models of Credit Asset Management and Multiple Capital Structures. Discusses the underlying logical differences between credit business (earning principal and interest, focusing on defense and diversification) and equity business (seeking risk premium); analyzes the positioning of three major financing channels: banks (borrowing short and lending long), public bond markets (standardized), and private credit markets (complex, non-standard, carrying heavy intellectual origination), explaining how Apollo matches Athene's low-cost liabilities with safe, long-cycle credit assets.
- [22:02-25:39]: The Intersection of High-Growth Tech and Capital Intensity. Explores the tech industry's migration from historically "capital-light" to the "extremely capital-heavy" AI-native phase (such as data centers, chips, and energy); analyzes the migration of institutions like family offices under the "Total Portfolio Approach," explaining how private hybrid assets fill the vacuum between traditional asset allocation buckets.
- [25:40-28:24]: Deconstructing Risks Under Large-Scale Capex Financing. Analyzes the unprecedented scale of $800 billion in capex by just the top four tech giants in 2026, pointing out that this underlying infrastructure cannot be entirely borne by venture equity; deconstructs how Apollo separates commercial risk on the venture side from asset credit with reusable physical value on the infrastructure side.
- [28:25-30:05]: Cross-Regional Physical Headquarters Layout and Transformational Talent. Discusses Apollo's plans to open a second headquarters to acquire non-traditional financial talent, noting that talent at the new headquarters will focus more on connecting disruptive business models with growth ecosystems.
- [30:06-32:41]: Shaping by External Forces and Macro Demographic Constraints. Discusses the impact of aging and labor shortages on the relationship between GDP and employment, and how entrepreneurs can achieve capital recycling and restructuring through private liquidity events in a capital-constrained environment.
- [32:42-36:00]: Software Repricing Risk Under the Impact of AI. Points out that over the past decade, 30% of private equity flowed into enterprise software, and direct lending has a severe overexposure in this area; asserts that as AI disrupts pricing models as a direct competitor, PE/credit portfolios that entered at high premiums will face catastrophic returns, making "software repricing" inevitable.
- [36:01-37:09]: Rate of Change in Verifiable Right/Wrong vs. Unverifiable Judgment. Uses roles with "standard correct answers" like programming (vibe coding) and finance as examples, pointing out that their AI replacement rate will show a vertical, steep curve, while areas requiring complex judgment will show a gradual augmentation pattern.
- [37:10-38:54]: Blue-Collar and White-Collar Rebalancing in Labor Structure and Credit Risk Management. Predicts a societal shift toward a "blue-collar rise, white-collar decline" structure, reflecting political and economic pressures on cities with high concentrations of traditional white-collar employment; elucidates the structured defensive strategies of high-level credit teams when facing 30-year long-cycle credit exposures.
- [38:55-42:03]: Moral Leadership and the UPenn Controversy. Marc Rowan details the underlying logic of his public confrontation against the leadership of his alma mater, UPenn, after October 7, pointing out that the core of the issue was not limited to free speech or antisemitism, but rather the systemic bias of the university as a 300-year-old moral institution showing favoritism and moving toward "anti-American, anti-capitalism, anti-merit" stances.
- [42:04-44:46]: Non-Absolutism and Meritocracy in Corporate Operations. Criticizes the business world's blind adherence to DEI, sharing Apollo's independent climate governance principles ("make it better, not worse") and hiring criteria ("merit adjusted for distance traveled"—meritocracy adjusted for the distance an individual has traveled), emphasizing "do right over easy."
- [44:47-46:15]: The Leap from Success to Significance. Marc Rowan shares a consensus from his exchanges with Andreessen, pointing out that founders who have already achieved wealth and commercial success should assume the responsibility of moral guidance and social change, rather than retiring to play golf.
- [46:16-49:55]: Apollo's Cultural Heritage and Scaling Challenges. Explains the necessity of building a replicable Apollo culture (Playing to Win) at a scale of 6,000 people; proposes mechanisms like establishing a "Wall of Shame" to eliminate the fear of making mistakes, encouraging "failing fast, correcting fast," and balancing the desire to win with the fear of failure.
- [49:56-54:34]: Long-Term Vision of Financial Institutions. Explores Apollo's 25-year vision of building a global financial infrastructure that balances financial product innovation (Daily pricing, market making) with human connection (moments that matter), maintaining an organizational ecosystem of "intellectual insubordination" and informality.
Core Viewpoints List
- The core value of private credit and hybrid equity lies in filling the capital market failure vacuum between traditional public markets and fixed asset allocation buckets.
- Anchor: [23:27-24:49]
- Type: Opinion
- Explanation: Traditional asset allocation buckets (such as public equities, public bonds, and alternative private equity) are strictly segregated, leaving investment-grade private assets—which sit between public and private markets and offer the optimal risk-reward ratio—without liquidity support. Apollo's hybrid business precisely captures the excess returns within these "gaps between buckets."
- The longevity of financial institutions depends on structural immunity to "heart attacks" (the asset-liability mismatch of borrowing short and lending long) and "cancer" (the covert accumulation of low-quality assets).
- Anchor: [05:22-05:59]
- Type: Fact
- Explanation: Institutions like Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers died of sudden funding halts ("heart attacks"), whereas Apollo builds an immune barrier on the funding side through long-term locked retirement liabilities (Athene) and keeps principal co-investments on the asset side to curb the accumulation of bad debt.
- Enterprise Software has been overpriced over the past decade and is now experiencing catastrophic "software repricing" risks under the AI wave.
- Anchor: [32:42-33:53]
- Type: Prediction
- Explanation: 30% of the private equity industry's exposure, along with a large volume of direct lending, is tied up in enterprise software. Previous valuation multiples did not price in the substitution risk brought by AI's "free data and code." AI disrupts this premise, which will severely damage PE exits and debt returns for those who entered at historical highs.
- The capex scale of large AI infrastructure (chips, energy, data centers) has reached sovereign-nation levels and cannot be sustained by venture equity alone; it must undergo credit stratification and asset offloading.
- Anchor: [24:55-26:15]
- Type: Opinion
- Explanation: In 2026, the top four cloud giants alone will generate $800 billion in capex, making equity financing costs extremely high and unsustainable. The role Apollo plays is to slice the "commercial success rate of frontier models (Equity risk)" away from the "physical residual value of chips and data centers (Credit risk)" at the source, thereby introducing low-cost credit capital.
- In the era of ubiquitous intelligence, the AI replacement rate for roles that can automatically verify right from wrong (such as coding) is vertically steep, while decisions requiring complex human judgment will be permanently augmented.
- Anchor: [34:21-35:14]
- Type: Opinion
- Explanation: The upper limit of AI's capability depends on the closed loop of the feedback loop. Code can self-verify by running tests, so the rate of change is steep; however, business decisions, strategic investments, and philosophical discourses have no absolute right or wrong and must rely on human subjective values and real-world dynamics for calibration.
- Daily Pricing and market discovery of financial products are the hard entry tickets for private markets to enter the next order of magnitude of growth (Democratization).
- Anchor: [17:24-18:25]
- Type: Fact
- Explanation: When penetrating five markets dominated by public-market habits—such as individuals, 401ks, and traditional asset managers—financial institutions must accommodate their compliance and liquidity habits. Apollo's launch of Daily pricing for its investment-grade private suite before June 30 is precisely in line with this objective shift.
- The blind adherence of universities and commercial institutions to DEI and absolutist standards is eroding social competitiveness, which should be bottom-lined by "merit adjusted for distance traveled."
- Anchor: [41:40-42:30]
- Type: Opinion
- Explanation: Rowan emphasizes that people should not be admitted or hired as "categories" based on immutable characteristics like skin color or gender, but rather as independent individuals, considering the actual obstacles they overcame and their journey within their own family and social backgrounds.
- The secret to an organization maintaining long-term hunger lies in balancing the "desire to win" with the "fear of failure," and establishing an all-hands "Wall of Shame."
- Anchor: [47:38-48:30]
- Type: Opinion
- Explanation: Most successful institutions eventually drift into mediocrity because executives are afraid of making mistakes and thus avoid making decisions. By having all senior partners publicly acknowledge past investment losses and listing them on a Wall of Shame, "decision failure" is decriminalized, encouraging rapid correction and clean-sheet thinking.
Internal Tensions and Self-Corrections
- [13:33-13:58] vs [14:47-15:09]: The commercial tension between the limitations of origination capacity and the principal-based co-investment model.
On one hand, Marc Rowan admits that Apollo's core bottleneck is not fundraising, but the extreme scarcity of the output capacity to "originate interesting investments," requiring strict control over asset allocation. On the other hand, driven by the pursuit of higher fees and alignment of principal interests, Apollo must act as a principal, heavily binding its own capital with clients ("eating your own cooking"). This "finite ceiling of origination output" and the strategic demand of "Apollo expanding its principal leverage to bring in more clients" constitute a long-term tension. The firm must make difficult, proactive trade-offs between protecting the origination barriers of proprietary assets and achieving the institutional expansion of democratization.
Plain English Recap
Let's talk in plain English about this conversation with Apollo's chief, Marc Rowan. This share is not just a peek under the hood of a financial empire, but also a bucket of cold, sobering water poured over a tech world currently in the grip of AI fever.
The first bombshell Marc Rowan dropped is "Software Repricing." For over a decade, Silicon Valley and Wall Street took it for granted that "software is eating the world." A massive amount of private equity (PE) funds and direct lenders locked at least 30% of their capital into enterprise software, believing its cash flows were rock-solid. But Rowan ruthlessly points out that this AI wave is acting as a lethal competitive substitute. This doesn't mean software companies will die overnight, but rather that their previous valuations were based on a perfect future "without AI competition, and where data and code aren't free." Now that AI is here, the productivity barrier has plummeted, and a flood of challengers is waiting in the wings. The exit valuations of software providers bought at high premiums will be heavily discounted in both public and private markets. Rowan predicts that over the next few years, private equity investments heavily exposed to enterprise software will face "catastrophic" returns—this is what he calls "software repricing."
The second core insight lies in "Capital Stratification of AI Infrastructure." Everyone is talking about Nvidia chips, gigawatts of power, and hundreds of billions in data centers. But Rowan, looking at it as a financier, asks: how can this sovereign-scale funding—larger than any project since "the invention of fire"—be financed solely by expensive venture equity? It's completely unrealistic. To solve this, financial institutions must stratify the risks of these projects: "whether the large model succeeds or the business model works" belongs to the high-risk equity portion; but "how much the chips, facilities, and substations in the data center are actually worth" belongs to credit assets with physical residual value. What Apollo does in the middle is break apart these complex, non-standard mega-projects, package the risks of hard, reusable infrastructure assets, and sell them to insurance companies and pension funds as low-cost, investment-grade credit.
Finally, Rowan punctures the common misconception about Apollo: it is not at all a traditional "private equity (PE) firm" that goes around buying companies for leveraged buyouts. Out of its trillion-dollar AUM, PE accounts for only a tiny fraction; 80% of its assets are actually stable, investment-grade credit. At its core, Apollo is a massive "pension manager" and "lender to large industrial entities." By acquiring Athene (a retirement services provider), they locked in ultra-low-cost, long-term liabilities, and then worked relentlessly to originate high-quality, high-certainty assets to match those liabilities. While others frantically chase AUM growth, Apollo remains intensely paranoid, setting up a "Wall of Shame" in the office to force all profitable partners to claim their losses. This keeps the organization, even at a scale of 6,000 people, in the state of "clean sheet thinking" and "intellectual insubordination" learned during the startup days at Drexel.
Key Segments to Listen To
- [05:22-05:59]: Rowan deeply deconstructs the two causes of death for financial institutions—sudden myocardial infarction ("the risk of rupture from borrowing short and lending long on the funding side") and chronic cancer ("the step-by-step accumulation of bad debts on the asset side"). Using extremely cold and clinical terms, he explains why Apollo fundamentally rejects liquidity mismatch, making this a bible-grade segment for understanding liability-side governance in financial institutions.
- [17:24-18:25]: Announces that Apollo's investment-grade private products will launch "Daily Estimated Value" by June 30, accompanied by standardized IDs and market-making mechanisms. This move is a complete disruption of the underlying rules of traditional private markets and a milestone declaration of penetration into the democratization of 401ks and mass wealth management.
- [32:42-33:53]: Marc Rowan's ruthless bearishness on the asset revaluation of enterprise software under the impact of AI. He accuses Wall Street and credit rating agencies of only "waking up" a few weeks ago to the erosion of enterprise software by AI competition. His tone is filled with mockery of the market's lagging response, serving as an absolute must-hear alarm for tech investors.
- [41:40-42:30]: Elucidates the hiring philosophy of "Merit adjusted for distance traveled." Using highly characteristic language, Rowan opposes fast-food-style DEI that labels candidates with immutable characteristics (immutable gender/racial group identity tags), emphasizing respect for every striver who overcomes obstacles, showcasing his strong personal moral leadership.
Resonances with past episodes
- Corroboration→ The Reality of Security Crises and Organizational Resilience · Joe Sullivan
Rowan's theoretical prediction that 'AI replacement curves are extremely steep because code can self-verify' is corroborated by the reality observed by security expert Sullivan, where enterprise-side AI-assisted programming has led to an exponential explosion in code volume in the short term.
This[34:21-35:14] In the era of ubiquitous intelligence, the AI replacement rate for roles that can automatically verify right from wrong (such as coding) is vertically steep; code can self-verify by running tests, so the rate of change is steep.
Related[37:38-38:18] In the era of AI-assisted programming, the high speed of code generation has completely overwhelmed traditional application security systems, with one financial institution's monthly code generation exploding from 250,000 lines to 1.25 million lines within two months.
- Complement→ The Reality of Security Crises and Organizational Resilience · Joe Sullivan
Both advocate for decriminalizing mistakes by 'publicly dissecting failures and crises,' thereby overcoming decision paralysis caused by the fear of making mistakes at both organizational and individual levels, to build true long-term resilience.
This[47:38-48:30] The secret to an organization maintaining long-term hunger lies in establishing an all-hands 'Wall of Shame.' By having all senior partners publicly acknowledge past investment losses, 'decision failure' is decriminalized, encouraging rapid correction and clean-sheet thinking.
Related[40:01-40:20] True personal reputation and professional resilience do not come from deliberately avoiding disasters, but from public reflection and community rebuilding after disasters. Having the courage to publicly dissect one's own crisis is the starting point for regaining peer respect.
- Corroboration→ Physical AI, Supply Ecosystems, and Organizational Evolution · Dara Khosrowshahi
Rowan's advocated mechanism of 'evaluating talent based on the obstacles overcome and the distance traveled by the individual' is highly isomorphic with Dara's growth view that 'overcoming life's challenges is the only way to build anti-fragility, and clearing obstacles is actually harmful.' Both emphasize the decisive role of adversity and struggle in shaping true competitiveness.
This[41:40-42:30] Universities and commercial institutions should not hire people as categories based on immutable characteristics, but should consider individuals as independent people, looking at the actual obstacles they overcame and their journey within their own family and social backgrounds (i.e., merit adjusted for distance traveled).
Related[09:12-09:59] Helicopter parenting is harmful to children's long-term development; overcoming various challenges in life is the source of deep human satisfaction. If parents clear all obstacles for their children, they deprive them of the opportunity to develop anti-fragility and self-efficacy.
- Complementary← The Ultimate Experience of Meditation and Self-Reconstruction · Stephen Zurface
The meditation AI guidance system here, by collecting physiological signals and session data, transforms the originally highly subjective meditation experience—which lacks objective standards of right and wrong—into quantifiable, verifiable closed-loop feedback, thereby validating and supplementing the assertion that the boundary of AI capability depends on the feedback loop.
This[34:21-35:14] The upper limit of artificial intelligence (AI) capability depends on the closed-loop feedback; roles that can automatically verify right and wrong will see a steep AI replacement rate, whereas decisions requiring complex human discretion will be permanently augmented.
Related[01:09:46-01:11:37] Artificial intelligence (AI) can compress the meditation learning cycle from thousands of hours to dozens of hours by digesting meditators' session data and physiological signals, combined with a skill tree for personalized, two-way interactive guidance.
- Complement← Economics of the AI Supercycle: The Context Gap in Enterprise Adoption · Ali Ghodsi
Both see the impact of AI lowering software development barriers and moats on the traditional software industry. Marc Rowan focuses on the heavy blow this trend deals to software valuations in capital markets, while Ali Ghodsi complements this with an industry perspective of forcing software vendors to improve efficiency to cope with reduced switching costs.
This[32:42-33:53] Enterprise software has been overpriced over the past decade and is undergoing a catastrophic risk of 'software repricing' under the AI wave, as free code brought by AI replaces previous valuation barriers.
Related[08:56-11:08] The introduction of AI has not led to the death of software, but has significantly lowered the barriers to entry and switching costs of software, forcing traditional software vendors to improve efficiency to cope with competition.
- Corroboration← Paradigm Reshaping of Credit and Technology · Dan Loeb
Both point out that low-cost code and technology substitutes brought by AI are completely disrupting the barriers of traditional software and information service industries, causing original high-quality valuation models to fail.
This[32:42-33:53] Enterprise Software has been overpriced over the past decade and is undergoing a catastrophic "software repricing" risk under the AI wave. Its previous valuation multiples did not price in the substitution risk brought by AI as "free data and code."
Related[11:55-12:44] Many software and information service enterprises defined as "high-quality" under traditional frameworks have rapidly lost their barriers and commercial moats under the paradigm disruption of the AI wave.
- Isomorphism← Paradigm Reshaping of Credit and Technology · Dan Loeb
The two are highly consistent in logical structure, both believing that AI cannot replace decision-making and transaction fields that lack absolute standards of right and wrong and rely heavily on human subjective value judgments, complex games, and deep interpersonal communication.
This[34:21-35:14] In the era of ubiquitous intelligence, the AI replacement rate for roles that can automatically verify right from wrong (such as coding) is vertically refracting, while decisions requiring complex human judgment will be permanently enhanced.
Related[22:20-23:12] AI cannot replace fields such as private equity, debt restructuring, and private credit, because these transactions deeply rely on complex negotiations, relationship networks, and high-frequency communication among humans.
This is one source-grounded reading, not a replacement for the original. Every point is anchored to its source, so you can check it yourself — and corrections are welcome.