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New Listings – State Street Just Listed Its Third Private Credit ETF. This One Goes Into the Plumbing.

The story of State Street and Apollo democratising private credit through ETF wrappers has been one of the most closely watched experiments in fund structure over the past year. PRIV launched in February 2025 and drew immediate SEC scrutiny over liquidity and valuation. PRSD, the short duration version, followed in September. Now, on March 10, 2026, a third product has landed on the NYSE: the State Street IG Public and Private ABS ETF, ticker PRAB.

And this one is going somewhere most ETF investors have never been before.

What PRAB Actually Is

PRAB is an actively managed investment grade ETF that blends publicly traded and privately originated asset-backed securities. ABS means the collateral backing the bonds is a pool of assets: mortgages, auto loans, equipment leases, CLOs, credit card receivables, business loans, infrastructure project cash flows, royalty streams. The public side of this market is enormous and well-understood. The private side is where it gets interesting.

Private ABS sits in the corner of fixed income that has historically been accessible only to large institutional allocators with the capital, legal resources, and relationship access to source deals directly. These instruments tend to be originated and held bilaterally, priced infrequently, and are not listed anywhere. Structuring them into an ETF that trades daily on the NYSE is not a trivial exercise.

What makes PRAB different from its siblings PRIV and PRSD is the specific collateral focus. Rather than a broad mix of investment grade private credit (which can include corporate loans, direct lending, and other forms), PRAB targets structured, asset-backed cashflows. The distinction matters. ABS structures provide an inherent layer of credit enhancement through overcollateralisation and tranching. The “private” component is not private in the sense of being unrated or speculative. It is investment grade credit that happens to have been originated and placed outside the public market.

Why This Is the Right Product at the Right Moment

ABS issuance has been running at record levels. US ABS issuance crossed $350 billion in 2025, with strong momentum in data infrastructure financing, renewable energy, and subscription-based receivables. Private ABS origination has accelerated particularly in areas where banks have retrenched: small business lending, equipment finance for AI infrastructure buildout, and speciality real estate.

Apollo, sourcing the private credit instruments for this product (as they did for PRIV and PRSD), has been one of the most active originators in this space. Their ability to source investment grade private ABS across a diverse range of sectors and provide daily liquidity backstop is central to how this product works. The structure directly addresses one of the core SEC concerns raised about PRIV: that the fund relied too heavily on a single liquidity provider for its private holdings. An ABS-focused mandate, with standardised structures and more predictable cashflow profiles, makes the liquidity argument considerably easier to make.

The timing also intersects with a broader shift in how institutional allocators think about structured credit. Post-2008, ABS carried reputational baggage that took years to shed. By 2026, that has largely faded. CLOs have been one of the best-performing fixed income asset classes of the cycle. Non-agency MBS has recovered and then some. Infrastructure ABS is now a core allocation for pension funds. The ETF format democratises access to something that has quietly become mainstream at the institutional level but remains largely invisible to the wider investing public.


The Series Is Now a Suite

It is worth stepping back to appreciate what State Street has built in thirteen months. PRIV opened the door to private credit in an ETF wrapper, broadly defined. PRSD offered the same concept with a shorter duration profile and a lower price point. PRAB now adds a structured credit layer, targeting the asset-backed end of the private market specifically.

These are not incremental product variations. Each addresses a different investor use case: PRIV for broad private credit exposure, PRSD for duration-sensitive portfolios, and PRAB for investors who want the structural protections of ABS combined with private market yield premium. Together they represent a systematic effort to build a full fixed income toolkit that includes private market access as a standard rather than an exception.

Whether PRAB draws more assets than PRIV remains to be seen. PRIV's early months were slow. But the market context in March 2026 is different from February 2025. The concept has been stress-tested. The SEC dialogue has matured. And investor appetite for yield outside traditional public markets has only grown.


The Bigger Picture

The continued convergence of public and private markets inside an ETF wrapper. PRAB is the latest and most structurally specific version of that story. State Street and Apollo are not done. Watch for further extensions into private infrastructure debt, specialty finance, and middle market lending.



Bernie Thurston

Bernie loves data. Fortunately for him, London’s finance industry has been indulgent, providing him lots of benchmark data to play with and enjoy. Bernie’s journey began at Sky, where he designed the first interactive television and helped build a technical-based charity (ctt.org). He then hopped over to finance, and soon found himself at a start-up working on dividends and derivatives. Then, by nature of the fact that finance and technology have rapidly conjoined, he found himself working with Credit Suisse to build an index aggregation and distribution platform. Markit then acquired the start-up and Bernie battled his way up the greasy pole becoming the Managing Director of Markit’s equities division, with responsibility for index, ETF and Dividends. But the siren song of startups called once more. And Bernie was headhunted to rescue a failing index business. Over five years, he helped reverse the fortunes of DeltaOne Solutions, turning into a fighting force. So successful was the turn around that Markit came along and acquired this company as well. But Bernie still loved start-ups. To that end, he founded Ultumus, an ETF and benchmark data company. Ultumus aims to provide the best data in the most timely and consumable manner possible. With clients on both buy and sell side, when something happens in the index or ETF industry, Ultumus is the first to know.

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