Alt Investments
Bigger Is Not Always Better – Reflections On Private Credit’s Recent Stresses

Redemption problems at a number of private credit funds have shone a bright, harsh light on the sector and the risks associated with it.
Jay Rogers, a figure in the financial and wealth management industry who has written in these pages before, writes about the dramas unfolding in the private credit sector (a topic the editor of Family Wealth Report has commented upon here). The redemption crises at Blackstone's BCRED, BlackRock's HLEND, and Blue Owl's OBDC II have put the structural vulnerabilities of retail-oriented evergreen private credit vehicles in the spotlight. Goldman's Solomon, Blankfein, and JP Morgan have issued warnings in the past 10 days that are unusually direct for senior executives at their level.
To comment on such material, please email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com and amanda.cheesley@clearviewpublishing.com
The usual disclaimers apply to views of guest writers, and we thank Jay Rogers for his contribution to conversations on these topics. Rogers is also a guest lecturer at the USC Marshall School of Business.
The private credit market's first real stress test in the
semi-liquid retail era is unfolding in real time, and it is
exposing a truth many mega-managers would prefer to ignore: scale
has become a liability, not an advantage. Three events in early
2026 made that plain. Blackstone's $82 billion BCRED faced record
redemption requests of about $3.7 billion (7.9 per cent of
assets) in the first quarter, forcing the firm to lift its
quarterly tender cap from 5 per cent to 7 per cent and inject
$400 million of its own capital to honor 100 per cent of demands.
BlackRock capped withdrawals from its $26 billion HLEND after
receiving $1.2 billion in requests representing 9.3 per cent of
net asset value. Blue Owl permanently halted redemptions in OBDC
II and executed a $1.4 billion asset sale to fund an orderly wind
down. Blue Owl shares have since fallen roughly 40 per cent
year-to-date.
These are not isolated liquidity blips. They are the predictable
consequence of massive fundraising colliding with deployment
pressure and mismatched investor expectations.
The industry's most credible voices are now saying so explicitly.
In his annual shareholder letter released this week, Goldman
Sachs CEO David Solomon wrote that concerns about private credit
– including "underwriting quality or exposure to software
companies that may be negatively affected by AI" – are "a
reminder that the credit cycle has not been repealed." His
predecessor Lloyd Blankfein, who steered Goldman through the 2008
financial crisis, went further on a Bloomberg podcast
appearance alongside Citadel co-CIO Pablo Salame: "I don't feel
the storm, but the horses are starting to whinny in the corral."
His specific concern was hidden leverage and opaque valuations,
the same structural features that amplified 2008's damage once it
began.
Meanwhile, JP Morgan has acted before the crisis rather than
reacting to it. According to CNBC and the Financial
Times, JP
Morgan marked down the value of software company loans held
as collateral by private credit funds, reducing borrowing
capacity for those funds without waiting for a default. Unlike
most competitors, JP Morgan contractually retains the right to
revalue collateral at any time. "As the world gets more volatile,
this outcome should be expected. I'm shocked that people are
shocked," said Troy Rohrbaugh, co-CEO of JP Morgan's commercial
and investment bank.
I have been tracking this structural problem for 15 years.
The scale dynamic in private credit is not a new phenomenon
– it is the same pattern I described in our 2010 white paper
on institutional groupthink in manager selection. The explosion
of investment consultants and benchmark-chasing databases has
funneled capital toward the largest, most visible managers in
every cycle.
In 2025 alone, the 10 largest private credit funds captured
nearly 46 per cent of all capital raised – the highest
concentration in over a decade. That capital tsunami forces
flagship platforms into ever-larger deals – typically
companies with $200 million or more in EBITDA – where they
compete head-to-head with broadly syndicated loan syndicates and
public high-yield. The result is spread compression and yield
erosion. Selective is a word that rarely survives contact with a
$50 billion mandate.
The AI disruption angle is not incidental; it is the engine
accelerating the downturn. Software represents roughly 25 per
cent of all private credit loans by most estimates, and the
sector's underwriting assumptions – stable recurring
revenue, low churn, high barriers to entry – are precisely
what AI tooling is challenging. When the cash flows underpinning
leveraged loan structures turn out to be less durable than
underwritten, the math gets ugly fast. JP Morgan's markdowns are
not a reaction to defaults. They are a forward judgment about
where software-heavy portfolios are heading, and the bank is
acting accordingly.
Default data confirms the divergence. Fitch's privately monitored
ratings portfolio posted a record 9.2 per cent default rate in
2025, up from 8.1 per cent in 2024. Companies with $25 million or
less in EBITDA posted a 15.8 per cent default rate, versus 4 per
cent for those above $100 million, a four-to-one ratio that tells
a clear story about where structural vulnerabilities sit.
Contrast this with smaller and mid-sized managers focused on the
lower middle market – companies typically below $100 million
in EBITDA, many in the $10–$50 million range. Middle-market
direct-lending spreads have stabilized in the 500 to 550 bps
range over SOFR, carrying a 100 to 150 bps premium to syndicated
markets. Q3 2025 BDC data showed all-in yields still at 9.76 per
cent after 150 bps of rate cuts, with trailing one-year realized
losses of just 0.66 per cent. Preqin return dispersion data shows
top-quartile North America direct-lending IRRs outpacing medians
at widening margins, precisely because scale-driven managers are
chasing volume over selectivity.
Blankfein's concern about retail exposure is the most pressing
element of this story. The $1.8 trillion private credit market
has grown to roughly the size of the subprime mortgage market at
its 2007 peak. The administration's push to route private credit
exposure through 401(k) plans, at the precise moment the cycle is
turning, represents a risk that deserves to be named clearly and
addressed directly.
Howard Marks has warned for decades that the pendulum of investor
psychology swings hardest at extremes of scale and popularity.
Blankfein, in a separate Financial Times interview,
extended the logic: "The longer it takes between reckonings,
there is a potential for a more severe reckoning." That detail
deserves weight when an allocator tells you a $30 billion fund is
"best in class."
For family offices and long-term investors, the allocation
framework is clear. Avoid the liquidity mismatch of retail
evergreen vehicles, the redemption crises of early 2026 were
structural features, not anomalies. Avoid software-heavy direct
lending portfolios until the AI disruption cycle completes its
repricing. Favor closed-end, institutional-grade mid-market funds
or co-investments alongside proven general partners who still
underwrite as if it is their own capital. Private credit is not
broken. The credit cycle has not been repealed. It has merely
been deferred – and deferred cycles, as anyone who survived
2008 can attest, tend to collect interest.