A securities fraud class action has been filed against Hercules Capital, Inc. (NYSE: HTGC), a Business Development Company (BDC), and certain executives on behalf of investors who purchased securities between May 1, 2025 and February 27, 2026 under the federal securities laws, including Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Investors allege the company and its leadership misrepresented the rigor of its due diligence processes, loan origination procedures, and portfolio valuation methods while touting disciplined underwriting as a hallmark of the business. According to the complaint, the company's deal sourcing essentially amounted to copying Google Ventures' investments, its valuation team was understaffed with inadequate oversight, and it misclassified portfolio investments to obscure software debt exposure. When these practices were revealed through an investigative report, Hercules Capital's stock price fell sharply, causing significant losses to investors.
Case Name: Hunter Hanlon Taylor v. Hercules Capital, Inc., et al.
Case No.: 3:26-cv-02465-VC
Jurisdiction: U.S. District Court, Northern District of California
Filed on: March 20, 2026
Hercules Capital is a private credit firm, headquartered in San Mateo, California, also known as a Business Development Company, which specializes in making private loans to companies through loan origination and underwriting to venture-backed portfolio investments and describes itself as the largest non-bank source of venture financing in the market. The company manages more than $5.7 billion of assets with a concentrated focus on portfolio investments across life sciences and technology in the private credit sector and focuses on life sciences investments, venture-backed technology investments, and private equity/sponsor-backed technology investments.
May 1, 2025 – February 27, 2026, inclusive.
All persons and entities that purchased or otherwise acquired Hercules Capital securities during the Class Period and were damaged thereby may be eligible to join the Hercules Capital, Inc. (HTGC) class action lawsuit.

The complaint targets Hercules Capital, Inc., Chief Executive Officer Scott Bluestein, and Chief Financial Officer Seth H. Meyer for allegedly misleading investors about the company's underwriting standards and portfolio management practices in violation of federal securities laws. Throughout the class period, the company filed quarterly reports on May 1, 2025, July 31, 2025, and October 30, 2025 stating that prospective portfolio companies were subject to completion of due diligence and final investment committee approval processes. On February 12, 2026, CEO Bluestein issued a press release emphasizing that the company was maintaining disciplined underwriting as its hallmark and remained committed to fundamental principles of disciplined credit and underwriting. That same day, the company filed its Form 10-K stating that the origination process for investments included sourcing, screening, preliminary due diligence, and deal structuring and negotiation. According to the complaint, these representations painted a picture of robust oversight and careful analysis, but the reality was starkly different because deal sourcing managers relied on other investors' due diligence by copying the Google Ventures investment list. Investors allege the company overstated the due diligence applied to its deal sourcing and loan origination, as well as to its portfolio valuation process despite a valuations team that lacked cross-team review and adequate checks, and reported misclassified portfolio investments that underrepresented its software debt exposure, which the complaint says comprised approximately 35% (about $1.5 billion) of the loan portfolio and was marked at or around part. As a result, the complaint alleges the company overstated and misrepresented its portfolio valuations, rendering defendants' positive statements about the company's business, operations, and prospects materially misleading and lacking a reasonable basis.
On February 27, 2026, Hunterbrook Media published an investigative report entitled "The Myth of Hercules Capital" based on interviews with former employees that contradicted the company's public representations and scrutinized Hercules Capital's private credit practices. According to a former Hercules analyst who worked on deal sourcing, the company's process essentially amounted to going on the website for Google Ventures and just seeing what they invest in and copying it rather than conducting independent due diligence. A former member of Hercules' finance team described the valuations team as consisting of just four people in a single reporting line responsible for dozens of companies with few checks or cross-team review, highlighting inadequate internal controls in the valuation process. The report also revealed that the company underrepresented its significant software debt exposure by assigning certain businesses that described themselves as software companies to categories outside of software, even as industry software debt was in distressed territory and while the company marked software loans at par, or about 100 cents on the dollar. These revelations directly contradicted the company's repeated assurances about disciplined underwriting, robust due diligence processes, and comprehensive sourcing methodologies that had been presented to investors throughout the class period and called into question the integrity of portfolio valuation.
On February 27, 2026, following publication of the Hunterbrook Media report, Hercules Capital's stock price fell $1.22, or 7.9%, to close at $14.21 per share on unusually heavy trading volume for HTGC, reflecting a single-day decline tied to the disclosure.
Disclaimer: This shareholder alert is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney for personalized guidance. No specific outcomes are guaranteed.
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