- Top private credit BDCs — Ares Capital, Golub Capital, Apollo, Blackstone, Blue Owl — are all reporting declining yields as the Fed has cut rates, compressing their floating-rate returns.
- Default rates are climbing: problem loans at major lenders rose meaningfully in Q1, with some portfolios seeing borrowers miss payments or seek amendments at elevated rates.
- AI poses a structural threat to a key private credit niche — software company loans — as AI tools reduce headcount and cash burn, shrinking the collateral base lenders relied on.
- Retail investors, who poured billions into private credit funds over the past three years, are now redeeming at an accelerating pace, forcing managers to sell assets or slow new lending.
What Happened?
After years of double-digit returns and explosive growth, private credit is hitting a wall. The asset class boomed when interest rates were high, as floating-rate loans automatically paid more. But the Federal Reserve’s rate cuts have eroded that advantage, and the highest-quality borrowers have refinanced into cheaper bank loans. What’s left in private credit portfolios are increasingly the riskier, harder-to-refinance credits — and defaults are rising to reflect that. Ares Capital, the largest publicly traded BDC, along with peers Golub, Apollo’s MFIC, Blackstone’s BCRED, and Blue Owl’s products all reported weaker Q1 earnings as net investment income fell.
Why It Matters?
Private credit was Wall Street’s hottest product pitch for the past three years, attracting hundreds of billions from pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and a new wave of retail investors through interval funds and BDCs. The narrative was simple: higher yields, low volatility, and a “boring” alternative to volatile public markets. That narrative is now fraying. Falling returns make it harder to justify the illiquidity premium investors accepted. Rising defaults undercut the “safety” story. And the AI threat to software lending — one of the most popular private credit sectors — introduces a structural risk that lenders are still figuring out how to underwrite. If retail redemptions accelerate, managers could face a liquidity crunch in portfolios they designed to be illiquid.
What’s Next?
The industry is bracing for more defaults through 2025 as rate cuts alone won’t cure over-leveraged borrowers. Large managers are pivoting toward asset-backed lending — infrastructure, real estate, and equipment finance — which they argue is more durable than corporate direct lending. Retail fund structures will face scrutiny if redemption queues grow. The shakeout may ultimately benefit the largest, most diversified managers, while smaller or more concentrated lenders face existential pressure. Private credit’s era of easy money is over; what comes next depends on whether managers can adapt faster than their loan books deteriorate.
Source: The Wall Street Journal












