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A third of the U.S. leveraged loan and direct lending markets is considered stressed, equating to $770 billion. This figure is double the percentage from 2019 and three times the dollar amount, presenting a significant opportunity for opportunistic credit investors as it exceeds the $640 billion of available global opportunistic capital.
Years of low interest rates encouraged risk-taking, resulting in a large pool of low-rated loans (B3/B-). Now, sustained higher rates are stressing these weak capital structures, creating a boom in distressed debt opportunities even as the broader economy performs well.
J.P. Morgan has significantly increased its 2027 default forecast for leveraged loans by 100 basis points to 4.5%, citing disruption in the software sector. In contrast, the forecast for high-yield bonds was only raised by 25 basis points to 2.25%, highlighting a dramatic divergence in expected credit performance between the two asset classes.
The credit market appears healthy based on tight average spreads, but this is misleading. A strong top 90% of the market pulls the average down, while the bottom 10% faces severe distress, with loans "dropping like a stone." The weight of prolonged high borrowing costs is creating a clear divide between healthy and struggling companies.
Private equity giants like Blackstone, Apollo, and KKR are marking the same distressed private loan at widely different values (82, 70, and 91 cents on the dollar). This lack of a unified mark-to-market standard obscures true risk levels, echoing the opaque conditions that preceded the 2008 subprime crisis.
Aegon's Global Head of Leverage Finance, Jim Schaefer, shares a critical heuristic: once a leveraged loan's price falls below the 80-cent mark, it has a high probability of entering a formal restructuring. This price level acts as a key warning indicator for investors, signaling imminent and severe distress.
With fewer traditional credit cycles, the most fertile ground for distressed investing lies in industry-specific downturns caused by technological or policy shifts. These "microcycles" offer opportunities to invest in good companies working through temporary, concentrated disruption.
The market is focused on potential rate cuts, but the true opportunity for credit investors is in the numerous corporate and real estate capital structures designed for a zero-rate world. These are unsustainable at today's normalized rates, meaning the full impact of past hikes is still unfolding.
The current pressure on direct lending is creating opportunities in other, previously quiet corners of private credit. Strategies like special situations, opportunistic funds, and mezzanine financing will see increased activity as companies needing to refinance or secure more capital find traditional avenues less accommodating.
Sectors that have experienced severe distress, like Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS), often present compelling opportunities. The crisis forces tighter lending standards and realistic asset repricing. This creates a safer investment environment for new capital, precisely because other investors remain fearful and avoid the sector.
The current rise in private credit stress isn't a sign of a broken market, but a predictable outcome. The massive volume of loans issued 3-5 years ago is now reaching the average time-to-default period, leading to an increase in troubled assets as a simple function of time and volume.