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PGIM argues that the true alpha in direct lending isn't just from the illiquidity premium. It's also generated through manager selection, strong covenants that allow for repricing risk if performance falters, and a disciplined focus on loss avoidance, which compounds returns over time.

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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.

The yield premium for private credit has shrunk, meaning investors are no longer adequately compensated for the additional illiquidity, concentration, and credit risk they assume. Publicly traded high-yield bonds and bank loans now offer comparable returns with better diversification and liquidity, questioning the rationale for allocating to private credit.

Private credit generates a 200 basis point excess spread over public markets by eliminating intermediaries. This 'farm-to-table' model connects investor capital directly to borrowers, providing customized solutions while capturing value that would otherwise be lost to syndication fees.

Private credit allows investors to act like chefs—deeply involved from ingredient sourcing (diligence) to final creation (structuring). Liquid market investors are like food critics, limited to analyzing the finished product with restricted access to information, which increases risk.

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.

The private credit market has seen little difference in returns between managers in recent years. However, a changing economic environment is expected to create significant dispersion, where managers with superior credit selection and origination capabilities will pull away from the pack.

PGIM's middle-market portfolio focuses exclusively on first-lien, senior-secured, cash-pay-only loans. This conservative, "boring in a good way" approach avoids structural and collateral risk from second-liens or PIK toggles, ensuring stable cash income and insulating investors from exogenous outcomes.

The post-GFC era of low defaults meant nearly every private credit manager performed well. That era is over. For the first time in over a decade, manager and asset selection are critical, which will lead to a wide dispersion in fund performance and a shakeout in the industry.

While intense competition has shrunk the illiquidity premium in mainstream private credit, esoteric strategies like asset-based lending (ABL) offer a "complexity premium." This niche has fewer competitors, allowing for excess returns that are decoupled from broader market pressures.

Unlike syndicated loans where repricing can be threatened easily by banks, direct loans have structural protections. Borrowers must find an entirely new lender and pay new fees to refinance, making it much harder to reprice debt downwards and thus preserving higher returns for investors.