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The fundamental model of private credit is sound. The primary risk stems from the sector's own success, which has attracted massive capital inflows. This creates pressure for managers to deploy capital, potentially leading to weakened underwriting standards and undisciplined growth.
A flood of capital into private credit has dramatically increased competition, causing the yield spread over public markets to shrink from 3-4% to less than 1%. This compression raises serious questions about whether investors are still being adequately compensated for illiquidity risk.
Large banks have offloaded riskier loans to private credit, which is now more accessible to retail investors. According to Crossmark's Victoria Fernandez, this concentration of risk in a less transparent market, where "cockroaches" may be hiding, is a primary systemic concern.
Private credit grew by taking on riskier loans that banks shed after Dodd-Frank, making the core banking system safer. However, banks now provide wholesale leverage to these private credit funds with minimal due diligence, creating a new, less transparent concentration of risk.
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 greatest systemic threat from the booming private credit market isn't excessive leverage but its heavy concentration in technology companies. A significant drop in tech enterprise value multiples could trigger a widespread event, as tech constitutes roughly half of private credit portfolios.
While the private credit asset class is expected to continue its growth, the market is maturing. The future will likely see a wider gap between top- and bottom-performing managers, with success depending more on origination skill and portfolio management rather than just riding market growth.
After PIMCO's highly profitable $2 billion gain on a loan to a Meta data center, other private credit lenders are piling into the space. This fierce competition is driving down rates and weakening investor protections like covenants, a classic sign of a frothy market nearing its peak.
A staggering 70% of private credit managers have less than a decade of experience, meaning their entire careers have been in a low-rate, bull market environment. This lack of cycle-tested experience poses a significant systemic risk as market conditions normalize and stress appears.
A sign of eroding discipline, private credit underwriters are beginning to offer covenant-lite deals, once unthinkable in a market known for strong investor protections. This shift indicates that intense competition for deals is forcing lenders to lower underwriting standards, mirroring a late-cycle trend previously seen in public markets.
The primary concern for private markets isn't an imminent wave of defaults. Instead, it's the potential for a liquidity mismatch where capital calls force institutional investors to sell their more liquid public assets, creating a negative feedback loop and weakness in public credit markets.