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Non-traded Business Development Companies (BDCs) intentionally have liquidity limitations. This design prevents a fire sale of illiquid assets during market stress, protecting the vehicle and the broader system from forced selling and cascading losses. It is a deliberate structural protection.
Offering daily liquidity while pursuing a multi-year investment strategy creates a dangerous duration mismatch. When investors inevitably demand their cash during a downturn, the long-term thesis is shattered, forcing fire sales and destroying value. A fund's liquidity terms must align with its investment horizon.
Recent negative headlines about private credit stem from illiquid private funds with redemption gates, not publicly traded BDCs (Business Development Companies). These public BDCs use permanent capital, meaning they don't face investor runs or forced asset sales.
Goldman Sachs avoids the term "semi-liquid" because it provides false comfort. The liquidity gates on these evergreen funds are a feature, not a bug, designed to prevent fire-selling assets. They are most likely to be activated when investors are clamoring for redemptions.
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.
The structure of modern private credit vehicles, particularly non-traded BDCs, replicates a classic asset-liability mismatch by funding illiquid loans with potentially liquid investor capital. This fundamental flaw predictably leads to liquidity crunches during redemption waves, which can escalate into broader credit crises as forced selling begins.
Permira's Ian Jackson argues that redemption limits in retail-oriented credit funds are working as intended to manage the mismatch between investor demand for liquidity and illiquid private loan portfolios.
Fears of a systemic private credit collapse are mitigated by a key structural feature: the manager's ability to cap redemptions at 5%. This prevents a forced mass liquidation of assets to meet redemption requests, containing the liquidity crisis to a small part of the market and averting a downward price spiral.
Many investors mistakenly believed private credit funds offered semi-liquidity, not understanding the underlying assets are fundamentally illiquid. The realization that liquidity is a discretionary feature, not a guarantee, is causing a healthy but painful exodus from the asset class as mismatched expectations are corrected.
Concerns that Business Development Companies (BDCs) will trigger a financial crisis are unfounded. Unlike banks levered 10-to-1 pre-2008, BDCs are legally capped at 2-to-1 leverage and typically operate closer to 1-to-1, minimizing systemic financial risk even if underlying loans default.
When facing a downturn or redemption pressures, private credit funds cannot easily sell their troubled, illiquid loans. Instead, they are forced to sell their high-quality, liquid assets, creating contagion risk in otherwise healthy public markets.