Private credit’s ‘zero-loss fantasy’ is coming to an end as defaults and fund exits rise


Deteriorating asset quality, collateral markdowns and a growing rush for the exits are rattling private credit markets and prompting comparisons to the Global Financial Crisis.

But a spike in loan defaults, while painful, could help shake out pockets of stress from the $3 trillion sector and provide what one industry pro calls a “healthy reset” after its first major liquidity test.

Ares Management on Tuesday opted to curb investor withdrawals from its $10.7 billion private credit fund, just a day after Apollo Global Management unveiled similar measures in one of its vehicles. Ares has capped redemptions in its Ares Strategic Income Fund at 5%, after withdrawal requests surged to 11.6%, according to a Bloomberg report.

Other managers, including Blue Owl Capital and Cliffwater, have also scrambled to halt or restrict withdrawals in recent weeks, as rising default fears spark an investor retreat from the sector.

Comparisons to the build-up to the 2008 Global Financial Crisis are now intensifying as concerns over underlying loan quality grow.

Morgan Stanley recently warned default rates in private credit direct lending could surge to 8%, well above the 2-2.5% historical average, with pressure concentrated in sectors vulnerable to AI disruption, such as software.

‘Significant but not systemic’

However, Morgan Stanley analysts led by strategist Joyce Jiang also said an 8% default spike would be “significant but not systemic,” pointing to lower leverage among private credit funds and business development companies compared with 2008.

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Private credit’s ‘zero-loss fantasy’ is coming to an end as defaults and fund exits rise

Ares Management.

So what would a default spike of that magnitude look like in practical terms?

“An 8% default rate takes private credit from a ‘zero loss’ fantasy to a more normal credit asset class — painful in spots, but ultimately a healthy reset that frees up capital for stronger businesses,” said Sunaina Sinha Haldea, global head of private capital advisory at Raymond James.

She said a normalization from ultra‑low defaults would be “painful for some funds” but “healthy for the asset class if it forces better underwriting and more realistic valuations.”

An 8% or 9% default rate would largely manifest through so-called “shadow defaults,” such as maturity extensions and covenant waivers, said William Barrett, managing partner at Reach Capital. Lenders use these “amend-and-pretend” tools to keep borrowers afloat and avoid immediate bankruptcy.

While payment-in-kind agreements delay cash returns, increase debt, and potentially signal greater stress in the system, they also act as an effective “release valve” that stabilizes companies and prevents outright failures, he added.

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Private credit’s ‘zero-loss fantasy’ is coming to an end as defaults and fund exits rise

Apollo Global Management.

“For the real economy, this means capital becomes trapped in restructurings, leading to tighter future lending conditions,” Barrett told CNBC via email.

Pressure points

Market confusing sub-IG with IG private credit, says Barclays' Rogoff

But these are not the only pressure points, industry pros say.

“AI-exposed software is just the first fault line — the real risk is across any highly-levered, rate-sensitive borrower whose business model was priced for free money, especially in the U.S. where private credit grew fastest,” Haldea told CNBC via email.

Funds concentrated in volatile sectors or holding covenant-lite loans with weaker protections are also vulnerable, as are highly leveraged healthcare roll-ups, Barrett said. He highlighted certain smaller issuers that have recently recorded a 10.9% default rate, due to a lack of resources to absorb shocks.

‘Extreme’ leverage

The current malaise underlines the need to better distinguish between investment-grade and sub-investment-grade private debt, according to Brad Rogoff, global head of research at Barclays.

Sub-investment grade credit typically involves more “extreme” leverage, often tied to software risk and concentrated in the U.S., he said.

Investment grade, by contrast, tends to include private placement senior tranches, asset-backed mortgages, and similar assets. “There is a different risk profile between the two of them,” Rogoff told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Tuesday.

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Private credit’s ‘zero-loss fantasy’ is coming to an end as defaults and fund exits rise

Blackstone.

Private credit funds are also generally less leveraged today than the investment banks that were caught up in the 2008 crash were then, Rogoff noted. “The real difference between this and 2008 is that you had a lot of leverage on similar type assets that had full recourse to whoever owned them,” he said.

Despite the recent noise surrounding the liquidity mismatch between retail investors and semi-liquid vehicles, most private credit capital remains in traditional structures, backed largely by institutional investors with long-term investment horizons.

Nicolas Roth, head of private markets advisory at UBP, said the current wave of redemption requests represents the first real liquidity test for the asset class “at scale.”

He noted how default rates are “elevated, but manageable,” but added that redemption pressure, slowing deal flow, and mark-to-market dispersion are hitting the sector simultaneously.

“The adjustment period will separate strong platforms with structural liquidity buffers from weak platforms relying on subscription momentum to finance exits,” Roth told CNBC via email.

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UK’s Schroders pops 28% on Nuveen takeover that’s set to create asset management giant


Schroders soared to the top of the Stoxx 600 on Thursday, hitting a 52-week high, after U.S. fund management giant Nuveen said it would buy the U.K.’s largest standalone asset management.

The deal, sized at £9.9 billion ($13.5 billion), will create one of the world’s biggest asset management groups.

Nuveen — the investment management arm of the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America (TIAA), a pensions and insurance group — will acquire Schroders for up to 612 pence per share.

The deal will create a global fund management behemoth with almost $2.5 trillion in assets under management, including $414 billion in combined private markets assets.

Shares in London-listed Schroders ended the session 28.8% higher following the announcement.

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Private credit’s ‘zero-loss fantasy’ is coming to an end as defaults and fund exits rise

Schroders PLC.

Under the agreement, the Schroders brand will be maintained, with the company remaining headquartered in London. Established in 1804, Schroders currently manages about £824 billion in assets, almost two-thirds of which are in the EMEA region.

Nuveen manages about $1.4 trillion in assets, 94% of which are in the Americas.

The transaction will deliver “an attractive premium in cash” to shareholders, Elizabeth Corley, chair of Schroders, said in a statement.

Group CEO Richard Oldfield added that the deal will “significantly accelerate our growth plans to create a leading public-to-private platform with enhanced geographic reach and a strengthened balance sheet.”

“This transaction is about unlocking new growth opportunities for wealth and institutional investors around the world by giving our leading, differentiated public-to-private platform a broader global presence,” said Nuveen CEO William Huffman.

End of an era

The takeover signals the end of the Schroders family’s control over the 220-year-old business — with the billionaire British-German banking dynasty having held a 44% stake — and comes amid a sharp turnaround in fortunes for the company, according to Panmure Liberum.

“Schroders was a mess,” Rae Maile, analyst at Panmure Liberum, said in a note, highlighting rising costs and disclosure shortcomings.

Schroders reported its second-half earnings on Thursday, which saw adjusted operating profits surge 25% in 2025 to £756.6 million, beating its £745 million guidance and Panmure’s earlier £674 million forecast, while AUM increased by 6%.

“In just 15 months, this new management team had set out a plan to reinvigorate the business — it had cut costs, shed tangential businesses and re-established its links with its home equity market. To have achieved quite so much, quite so quickly is staggering, but still the market was not reflecting that in either estimates or rating,” Maile added.