Discover the full insider trade history of Carlyle Tactical Private Credit Fund, a publicly traded company based in United States. Shares trade on US US, under the oversight of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Finance & Banking sector, Carlyle Tactical Private Credit Fund has published 7 public disclosures. The latest transaction was filed on 13 May 2022 — Acquisition. Among the most active insiders: MCCABE JOAN Y. All data is free.
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Carlyle Tactical Private Credit Fund (CTAC) is a publicly marketed credit-oriented closed-end vehicle structured as a continuously offered interval fund. It is a U.S.-based investment trust and trades in the American market, with the listing venue tied to NYSE/NASDAQ infrastructure depending on the applicable quotation platform. For investors in France, Belgium, and Switzerland, CTAC should be viewed as an alternative credit and asset-management product rather than a traditional banking business. The fund is managed externally by Carlyle, one of the world’s leading alternative asset managers, through its Global Credit platform. ([carlyle.com](https://www.carlyle.com/ctac?utm_source=openai)) From a historical perspective, CTAC was launched in June 2018, while its Delaware statutory trust structure dates to December 2017 according to SEC filings. That relatively recent launch fits the fund’s purpose: to broaden access to private credit strategies in a format that can be distributed more widely to eligible investors through multiple share classes. The fund is structured as an externally managed diversified closed-end investment company, with an explicit objective of generating current income. ([carlyle.com](https://www.carlyle.com/ctac?utm_source=openai)) CTAC’s core business is to allocate capital across a broad range of private credit strategies and fixed-income instruments. Under normal circumstances, it invests at least 80% of assets in private fixed-income securities and credit instruments. The portfolio is managed opportunistically, allowing exposure to direct lending, opportunistic credit, liquid credit, asset-backed finance, and other private credit sleeves. This multi-strategy design is a key competitive advantage because it gives the fund more flexibility than single-strategy vehicles and allows it to shift toward areas where risk-adjusted income opportunities appear most attractive. ([carlyle.com](https://www.carlyle.com/ctac?utm_source=openai)) CTAC also benefits from Carlyle’s broader credit franchise. The fund highlights access to a large global credit platform and positions itself as a way to obtain exposure to private credit expertise without having to source loans directly. That branding matters in a competitive private-credit market where scale, origination, underwriting discipline, and portfolio monitoring are major differentiators. The fund’s stated portfolio construction emphasizes strategy diversification, geographic diversification, and sector diversification, which supports its role as an income-oriented allocation tool within a broader portfolio. ([carlyle.com](https://www.carlyle.com/ctac?utm_source=openai)) Recent developments show that CTAC remains active and financially relevant. In its 2025 annual review, the fund reported a 6.38% return for Class N shares for the year ended December 31, 2025, and a weighted average total yield of 9.4% at fair value. The fund also disclosed dividends across multiple share classes and continued to expand its financing structure, including the sale of mandatory redeemable preferred shares in 2025. As of early May 2026, Carlyle’s website showed NAV levels in the low $8 range per share, underscoring that CTAC is still actively managed and closely linked to the evolving private credit cycle in the United States. ([sec.gov](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1725472/000172547226000003/ctac-20251231.htm?utm_source=openai))