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Third Point expects the next structured credit opportunity to come from forced selling driven by ratings downgrades, not fundamental defaults. If BBB-rated CLO tranches are downgraded, insurance companies, who are major holders, will be forced to sell due to regulatory constraints, creating price dislocations.

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A slowing economy leads rating agencies to downgrade loans. Since Collateralized Loan Obligations (CLOs) have strict limits on lower-rated debt, they become forced sellers. This flood of supply depresses prices further, creating a negative feedback loop that harms even fundamentally sound but downgraded assets.

A downturn in private credit can escalate rapidly via a feedback loop. The cycle begins with redemptions and defaults, leading to forced selling of fund assets. This reveals a lack of deep liquidity, causing prices to gap down, which confirms investor fears and triggers more redemptions, creating a self-reinforcing downward spiral.

There is a growing risk of downgrades in the high-grade market. The minimal yield premium for a single-A rating over a triple-B rating incentivizes higher-quality companies to increase leverage, potentially leading to a wave of downgrades as issuance ramps up.

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.

The gap between single-B and riskier triple-C rated loans has widened to double its 10-year average. This high dispersion, driven by sector-specific fears and LME-related technicals, separates skilled from unskilled CLO managers. It creates an environment where proactive risk management and credit selection are paramount.

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.

If redemption requests outpace inflows, private credit funds are forced to sell assets. They will naturally sell their most liquid, highest-quality loans first. This creates a death spiral, leaving the remaining portfolio more leveraged and concentrated with lower-quality, harder-to-sell assets.

This credit cycle could harm CLOs more than the 2008 crisis. The danger isn't a massive spike in defaults, but rather a prolonged period of moderate defaults combined with historically low recovery rates on those loans. This combination erodes value more effectively than a short, sharp shock.

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.

Collateralized Loan Obligations (CLOs) have a structural covenant limiting their holdings of CCC-rated (or below) loans to typically 7.5% of the portfolio. As more loans are downgraded past this threshold, managers are forced to sell, even if they believe in the credit's long-term value. This creates artificial selling pressure and price distortions.