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Unlike corporate bonds with distant bullet maturities, most structured credit products return principal monthly. This constant amortization shortens the asset's duration over time, making its value progressively less sensitive to interest rate swings and mark-to-market fluctuations during periods of distress.
Unlike illiquid private equity, private credit funds provide a steady stream of cash flow through coupon payments. This self-liquidating feature perfectly solves the liquidity needs of the private wealth channel, making it a far more suitable and popular alternative asset for that investor base.
Post-crisis stigma has faded, making Collateralized Loan Obligation (CLO) tranches a top relative value pick in credit markets. The structure allows investors to precisely select risk exposure, from safe AAA tranches with attractive spreads to high-return equity positions, outperforming other credit assets.
Funds offer investors quarterly liquidity while holding illiquid, 5-7 year corporate loans. This duration mismatch creates the same mechanics as a bank run, without FDIC insurance. When redemption requests surge, funds are forced to sell long-term assets at fire-sale prices, triggering a potential collapse.
Unlike private equity (terminal value) or syndicated loans (interest-only), asset-based finance (ABF) provides front-loaded cash flows of both principal and interest. This structure inherently de-risks the investment over time, often returning significant capital before a potential default occurs.
For the past few years, the primary strategy was originating and packaging loans. Now, with market volatility and sector-specific stress, the better opportunities are in buying specific, mispriced tranches of existing securities on the secondary market rather than originating new ones.
A surge in European retail investment into Fixed Maturity Products (FMPs) creates a stable, long-term demand base for short-dated corporate bonds. This "locked-up" capital anchors the short end of the curve, providing stability during volatile periods and potentially distorting risk pricing.
Jeff Gundlach argues private credit's attractive Sharpe ratio is misleading. Assets aren't priced daily, hiding risk. When an asset is finally marked, it can go from a valuation of 100 to zero in weeks, exposing the “low volatility” as a dangerous fallacy.
Howard Marks argues that private credit's apparent low volatility during market downturns is not magic but an accounting feature. By not marking to market daily, it mimics the psychological trick of simply not looking at your public portfolio's value, creating a potentially false sense of security for investors.
The intermediate part of the curve offers the best risk-reward. Investors can capture "roll-down" returns by holding a bond as it shortens in maturity and its spread tightens. This benefit is absent in flat, long-dated curves, which also lack sufficient natural buyers.
The modern high-yield market is structurally different from its past. It's now composed of higher-quality issuers and has a shorter duration profile. While this limits potential upside returns compared to historical cycles, it also provides a cushion, capping the potential downside risk for investors.