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.
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.
While receiving high cash interest feels good for a lender, it can doom the investment. Forcing a distressed company to allocate all its cash to debt service starves it of the resources needed for a turnaround. This makes PIK (Payment-in-Kind) structures a more sustainable, albeit less immediately gratifying, option.
For underperforming companies, a gap often exists between the market-clearing leverage for senior debt (e.g., 5x EBITDA) and their current debt load. Specialized investors provide junior capital to fill this "two-turn problem" or "air bubble," facilitating a refinancing that senior lenders alone won't support.
The 5% default rate in private credit, compared to 3% in syndicated loans, is a function of its target market: smaller companies. Just as the Russell 2000 is more volatile than the Dow Jones, smaller businesses are inherently riskier. Applying leverage to a more volatile asset pool naturally results in more defaults.
Unlike syndicated loans where non-payment is a clear default, private credit has a "third state" where lenders accept PIK interest on underperforming loans. When this "bad PIK" is correctly categorized as a default, the sector's true default rate is significantly higher, around 5% versus 3% for syndicated loans.
When portfolios of loans (BWICs) come up for sale, the stressed assets sometimes fail to trade. This failure reveals that quoted prices were unrealistic, creating "air pockets" where a loan can reprice down 5-10 points overnight as the market discovers the much lower actual clearing price for that risk.
In an information-poor credit market, H.I.G. gains its advantage by tapping its network of portfolio company CEOs and deal teams who have competed with or analyzed a target. This internal, proprietary insight provides a deeper level of diligence that independent firms cannot replicate, allowing for confident investment in troubled situations.
