Context
Michael Dell’s family office has signalled an accelerated push into private credit, characterising current market dislocations as selective buying opportunities rather than a signal to retreat. The comments, attributed to Alisa Mall, chief investment officer of MSD Capital, were reported by Bloomberg on Mar 24, 2026 (Bloomberg, Mar 24, 2026, 00:33:10 GMT). Mall cautioned that default rates are likely to rise in 2027 and 2028, but suggested the near-term repricing creates the potential to source higher-quality exposures at attractive risk-adjusted valuations. This development comes as allocators reassess private credit allocations after a multi-year expansion in the asset class and amid wider stress in leveraged finance markets.
The family office’s move reflects a broader institutional recalibration. Private credit AUM and dry powder levels have attracted growing industry attention, and strategic buyers with long time horizons like MSD Capital (founded 1998) are repositioning portfolios to capture vintages that benefit from higher yields and tightened covenants. Investors should note the explicit timing referenced in the Bloomberg piece — the focus on 2027-28 — which implies a multi-year view on credit-cycle dynamics and default timing. For institutional allocators, the signal from a high-profile family office is that dislocation-driven sourcing, rather than index-tracking, is the priority.
These remarks are part of a pattern of opportunistic deployment by large private investors during periods of credit repricing. MSD Capital’s comments do not constitute a universal endorsement of private credit; rather, they highlight a strategy hinging on vintage selection, covenant quality, and sponsor alignment. Institutional investors will need to triangulate such strategy signals with their own liquidity constraints, regulatory profiles, and benchmark considerations. For further reading on private credit structuring and due diligence frameworks, see Fazen Capital’s insights on credit selection and manager diligence [Private Credit Diligence](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and our sector research on alternative credit [Alternative Credit Strategies](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Data Deep Dive
The Bloomberg report published on Mar 24, 2026 provides the near-term catalyst for this piece: a prominent family office explicitly hunting for private-credit "gems" while warning of higher defaults in 2027 and 2028 (Bloomberg, Mar 24, 2026). Those calendar years function as the critical window cited by MSD Capital’s CIO; for allocators this represents a time-limited stress projection rather than an immediate solvency crisis. The specificity of the 2027-28 timeframe should prompt portfolio scenario analysis on maturities, covenant cliffs, and refinancing risk concentrated in those years.
From a data standpoint, the market observable today shows spread widening and valuation dispersion across direct lending, mezzanine, and broadly syndicated credit. While syndicated loan secondary markets provide real-time pricing signals, private bilateral loans repriced by sponsor negotiation are less transparent; that opacity increases the value of deep due diligence and sponsor relationships. Historical precedent from earlier cycles shows that deal-level metrics — covenant strength, amortization schedules, and EBITDA sensitivity — are more predictive of loss severity than headline default rates alone.
Comparative analysis is instructive. Relative to public high-yield bonds and leveraged loans, many private credit instruments still trade with structural advantages: tighter covenants, first-lien priority, and bespoke monitoring rights. That said, the effective yield premium over broadly syndicated loans and high-yield indices has compressed at times, and the decision to transact requires a view on forward default trajectories. Institutional investors must therefore weigh current yield pick-up against projected default timing (the 2027-28 window) and potential recovery rates under stressed scenarios.
Sector Implications
A pivot by a major family office to selectively buy private credit has immediate implications across allocators, managers and lenders. For managers, it increases competition for higher-quality opportunities — sponsors with strong balance sheets and resilient cashflows — and places a premium on differentiated origination channels. For large institutional allocators, the MSD Capital move may validate elongated sourcing processes and justify higher internal resourcing for private credit selection.
Peers of private-credit managers will likely respond by tightening underwriting or by offering enhanced economic terms to win deals; this can lead to contraction in prospective returns for new vintage cohorts if demand outstrips available sponsor-quality paper. Over the medium term, however, if the 2027-28 default uptick materializes as forecast, vintages originated in the dislocation window could deliver superior long-term returns relative to vintages originated at cyclical peaks. Investors should compare returns year-over-year (YoY) across vintages rather than across aggregate AUM, as vintage effects can dominate headline performance metrics.
From a market-structure perspective, the move underscores the role of concentrated capital pools — family offices, sovereign wealth funds, and insurance balance sheets — in stabilizing private credit pricing during stress. Banks and non-bank lenders may scale back marginally risky exposures, thereby opening origination channels for well-capitalized private lenders with patient capital. For institutions benchmarking to public indices, this structural shift can create tracking error and liquidity-management challenges that must be explicitly modelled.
Risk Assessment
The explicit projection of higher default rates in 2027-28 introduces several risk vectors that institutional investors should quantify: timing risk, valuation risk, liquidity risk, and operational due diligence risk. Timing risk centers on the concentration of maturities and covenant resets within the 2027-28 window; portfolios with material exposure to that vintage band should stress test refinancing assumptions under higher-rate and lower-EBITDA scenarios. Valuation risk arises because privately negotiated prices can lag market repricings, and marking protocols vary widely across managers.
Liquidity risk is salient for institutions that rely on private credit yield carry; unexpected draws on liquidity to meet margin calls or sponsor capital needs can force asset sales into thin secondary channels. Operational due diligence risk — the ability of a manager to monitor complex, covenanted bilateral loans — becomes the differentiator between loss mitigation and value destruction. Allocators must therefore assess manager resourcing, legal templates, and workout track records with the same rigor applied to credit underwriting.
Counterparty and concentration risks are also relevant. A family-office-led buying wave could compress spreads for higher-grade private credit, pushing capital toward lower-quality credits if yield targets are rigid. Institutional investors should apply concentration limits by sponsor, sector, and vintage, and run reverse-stress scenarios that incorporate recovery assumptions materially lower than long-run averages.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital’s analysis recognizes the opportunistic logic driving MSD Capital’s stance, but we emphasize a differentiated, selection-driven approach rather than broad reallocation toward private credit. The contrarian insight is that the true opportunity may lie not in headline deals but in under-followed segments: unitranche restructurings, minority-equity-backed senior loans with strong covenant packages, and B- and C-loan participations where documentation standards remain robust. These niches can offer asymmetric upside when priced correctly and when managers possess workout expertise.
We also note that timing and execution matter more than headline allocation decisions. A disciplined deployment that stages capital across vintages and prioritizes deal-level protections will likely outperform a rapid, undifferentiated increase in private credit exposure. For institutions, partnering with managers who demonstrate clear sourcing pipelines and evidence of vintage management — including lift-outs, covenant levers, and active monitoring — will be more effective than chasing nominal yield spreads.
Finally, Fazen Capital advises that investors calibrate expectations for public vs private credit performance through cycle. While private credit can deliver illiquidity premia and contractual protections, recovery rates and loss severities in protracted downturns can erode realized returns. Accordingly, portfolio construction should balance opportunistic private deployments with liquid credit overlays to preserve optionality through the 2027-28 stress window.
Bottom Line
MSD Capital’s move to hunt for private-credit "gems" spotlights dislocation-driven sourcing during a window in which defaults are projected to rise in 2027-28 (Bloomberg, Mar 24, 2026). Institutional investors should prioritize deal-level diligence, vintage management, and liquidity planning rather than pursue headline allocations.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
FAQ
Q: How should an institutional investor adjust portfolio sizing ahead of the 2027-28 default window?
A: Adjustments should be driven by liability profiles and liquidity needs; practical steps include staging capital commitments, shortening duration of public-credit overlays, and stress-testing private-credit exposures under conservative recovery assumptions. Historical cycles show that vintage timing matters more than headline allocation, so staggered deployment and clear exit contingencies are prudent.
Q: What historically differentiates managers that protect capital in credit downcycles?
A: Managers with strong origination relationships, thorough covenant negotiation skills, and established workout teams outperform peers during stress. Historical precedent from prior downturns indicates that documented protections (first-lien, tighter covenants) and active monitoring materially improved recovery outcomes versus pari-passu, covenant-lite structures.
Q: Are family-office moves a reliable signal for public allocators?
A: Family offices often have longer horizons and higher concentration tolerance; their activity can indicate opportunity but should not be followed mechanically. Public allocators must weigh operational capacity, regulatory constraints, and liquidity profiles when interpreting such signals.
