bonds

Private Credit Stress Tests Show Pockets of Weakness

FC
Fazen Capital Research·
6 min read
1,501 words
Key Takeaway

Private credit AUM topped $1.5tn (Dec 2024 Preqin); CNBC (Mar 22, 2026) flags selective NAV markdowns. Expect vintage dispersion and higher defaults in stressed sectors.

Lead paragraph

Private credit has moved from niche to mainstream within institutional fixed income allocations, but recent commentary from advisers underscores that selective caution is appropriate rather than wholesale alarm. CNBC reported on March 22, 2026 that industry advisers see "pockets of weakness" in private credit strategies but do not expect a broad-based fund meltdown (CNBC, Mar 22, 2026). The asset class has increased materially in scale over the past decade: Preqin estimated global private credit assets under management at more than $1.5 trillion as of December 2024 (Preqin, Dec 2024). At the same time, shifts in underwriting, covenant packages and leverage mix—together with higher base interest rates since 2022—have produced variability in performance across vintages and managers.

Context

Private credit's structural drivers remain intact: banks continue to retrench from certain mid-market lending activities, and sponsors increasingly rely on direct lending for financing. That long-term demand helped grow AUM from the low hundreds of billions in 2014 to the >$1.5 trillion figure in late 2024 (Preqin, Dec 2024). Yet scale brings heterogeneity: large managers with diversified syndicated platforms show materially different risk profiles than boutique funds concentrated in one sector or geography. This dispersion is central to recent market commentary — the risk is concentrated, not systemic.

Interest rate trajectory has been a key contextual factor. The Federal Reserve's tightening cycle that began in 2022 pushed policy rates to multi-decade highs, lifting floating-rate returns for many private credit strategies but also increasing refinancing stress for borrowers that used cheaper financing in prior vintages. For investors, that means performance and liquidity outcomes are highly sensitive to vintage year, weighted-average coupon, and the mix of floating versus fixed-rate exposures within portfolios.

Finally, regulatory and reporting practices differ from public markets; many private credit funds report NAVs quarterly and apply manager valuations rather than mark-to-market public prices. This lag can mask intraperiod stress. CNBC's Mar 22, 2026 coverage flagged that some advisers prefer greater transparency and more frequent mark practices to surface weaknesses earlier (CNBC, Mar 22, 2026).

Data Deep Dive

Scale and dry powder: Preqin's Dec 2024 estimate of private credit AUM exceeding $1.5 trillion reflects sustained fundraising; Preqin also reported elevated dry powder in the sector through 2024, highlighting continued deployment capacity (Preqin, Dec 2024). Fundraising slowed in late 2023–2024 versus the prior two years, but aggregate capital available to private credit managers remained significant. That balance—ample capital chasing a finite pool of transactions—tends to compress pricing on the margin and can relax covenant terms, which raises borrower credit risk over time.

Performance and defaults: Industry return comparisons show private credit strategies historically delivered higher yield than public high-yield bonds and leveraged loans on a gross basis. PitchBook and other data providers estimated mid‑single to high‑single digit net IRRs for many private debt strategies through 2023–2024, versus lower mid-single digit returns for public high-yield benchmarks over the same recent period (PitchBook, 2024). Separately, default and distress indicators for leveraged credit have ticked up: aggregate leveraged loan distress ratios rose in 2024–2025 relative to 2021 levels, underpinning concerns about borrower stress in stretched sectors (S&P/LSTA monthly reports, 2025).

Liquidity and valuation: Unlike mutual funds or ETFs, many private credit vehicles have subscription lines, limited secondary markets and quarterly liquidity windows. CNBC's Mar 22, 2026 piece cited advisors cautioning that certain funds with concentrated positions and limited refinancing flexibility have undertaken NAV markdowns—small in number but meaningful where they occur (CNBC, Mar 22, 2026). Historical episodes (e.g., 2008–2009) demonstrate how illiquid credit can mask stress until refinancing cliffs and covenant resets force repricing; private credit's structural opacity can delay recognition of similar effects today.

Sector Implications

Banks: The retrenchment of banks from mid-market direct lending remains a structural tailwind for private credit managers. Regulatory capital constraints and deposit fragility have pushed banks to limit hold sizes for certain credits, which increases third-party demand for holdco and unitranche structures. This trend has accelerated since 2016 and was reinforced after 2023–2024 regional bank episodes; bank balance sheet behavior therefore continues to underpin private credit origination opportunities.

Sponsors and borrowers: Private equity sponsors increasingly use private credit for leverage in LBOs and add-on financing. That has two effects: it deepens relationship-based origination pipelines for large managers, and it creates potential concentration risk when sponsors cycle through the same lenders for multiple deals. The underwriting practices of 2021–2022 vintages—in some cases featuring looser covenants—are being tested against higher rates and slower growth in certain industries in 2024–2026.

Public markets comparison: Relative to high-yield corporate bonds and syndicated leveraged loans, private credit typically provides higher pick-up in yield but delivers lower liquidity and greater idiosyncratic manager risk. From a portfolio construction standpoint, that yield differential has been a compelling reason for institutional allocations, but the differential narrows if defaults and mark-to-market discounts rise in stressed sectors.

Risk Assessment

Concentration risk: The primary near-term risk in private credit is concentration—by sector, sponsor, geography or single-borrower exposure—within a fund. Funds concentrated in cyclical sectors such as energy or retail that face secular pressures can show rapid deterioration in NAVs. Managers with concentrated book or aggressive sponsor financing models have reported proportionally larger markdowns in episodic disclosures.

Liquidity and redemption: Many private credit funds are closed-end or have limited liquidity provisions, yet some vehicles include subscription lines and other short-term financing that can obscure true cash needs. If stressed credits trigger capital calls or force sales at distressed prices, that dynamic can amplify losses for late-cycle investors. CNBC's Mar 22, 2026 reporting emphasized that advisers are scrutinizing liquidity terms more closely in manager due diligence (CNBC, Mar 22, 2026).

Valuation risk: Manager-led valuations can smooth cycles; while that benefits long-term holders, it can mislead investors on timing for asset repricing. Historical precedent shows valuation lags can create abrupt adjustments when manager marks align to realizations or secondary sales. For institutional stewards, the operational risk of valuation governance is therefore a key oversight point.

Outlook

Over a multi-year horizon, the private credit market's demand drivers remain intact, supported by bank retrenchment and sponsor financing needs. However, performance dispersion is likely to increase: vintages originated in 2020–2022 with looser covenants and high leverage face elevated refinancing risk relative to 2018–2019 vintages that were conservatively structured. Investors can expect selective repricing, NAV markdowns in stressed niches, and continued fundraising albeit at a more measured pace through 2026.

Macro sensitivity will be significant. If policy rates stabilize and growth recovers modestly, floating-rate exposure should continue to provide income buffers for many funds. Conversely, a sharper growth slowdown would elevate default trajectories and compress recovery rates on stressed loans. Institutional allocations will need to balance yield objectives against liquidity management and vintage risk.

Fazen Capital Perspective

Fazen Capital views the current environment as a classic dispersion opportunity rather than a systemic crisis. Two non-obvious insights inform this perspective. First, manager resilience is as important as asset class exposure: top-tier managers with diversified pipelines, stronger covenant discipline, and conservative unitranche structuring are positioned to generate asymmetric outcomes versus smaller, sponsor-dependent boutiques. Second, the market is bifurcating along underwriting standards — funds that tightened covenants and took conservative leverage in 2023–2025 will likely outperform concentrated, covenant-lite vintages if stress materializes.

Operational diligence is critical. Given valuation opacity and idiosyncratic credit risk, institutional investors should prioritize track record across credit cycles, transparency in valuation policy, and explicit contingency planning for liquidity scenarios. For more on manager selection and portfolio construction in private credit, see our research hub: [Fazen Capital insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).

Bottom Line

Selective caution in private credit is justified: the market is large and durable, but performance will be driven by manager selection, vintage, and covenant quality rather than broad asset-class characteristics. For commentary on private credit structuring and manager due diligence, refer to our deeper coverage at [Fazen Capital insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

FAQ

Q: How have private credit default rates moved recently and what does that imply?

A: Default indicators in leveraged credit rose in 2024–2025 relative to early‑2021 levels, reflecting higher rate stress and sectoral weakness (S&P/LSTA monthly reports, 2025). For private credit, realized defaults lag public indices, so rising public-market distress can presage pressure in private vintages — particularly concentrated or covenant‑lite deals. Historical patterns suggest default spikes typically surface 6–18 months after public market weakness.

Q: Are valuations in private credit likely to reset quickly?

A: Valuation resets depend on realization events (refinancings, defaults, restructurings) and manager mark governance. Because many funds report quarterly and use manager marks, resets can be abrupt when realizations occur. Managers with active secondary markets or transparent LP reporting have tended to reflect stress earlier, reducing the chance of sudden, large NAV corrections.

Q: What structural changes would reduce systemic risk in private credit?

A: Greater transparency in NAV methodologies, more frequent reporting cadence, and standardized disclosure of covenant and leverage metrics would reduce informational asymmetry. Additionally, development of a deeper secondary market for private debt would improve price discovery and liquidity, lowering systemic amplification in stress scenarios.

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