Alt Investments
FEATURE: Taking Measure Of The Hunt For Yield In Private Credit
.jpg)
A hot topic for investment right now is private credit. Advisors to the wealthy tell this publication there is considerable interest in the sector. What are the opportunities, and risks?
There is a hunt going on among wealth managers - a hunt for
yield. And that pursuit has seen a surge of interest in what
might be loosely dubbed private credit.
Family offices, private banks and other advisors to the wealthy,
sometimes less inhibited in exploring more esoteric asset classes
than rule-bound pension funds and retail investors,
have been among the early adopters. Family offices, for example,
often come up in conversation when managers of private debt funds
talk about money-raising pitches.
Certainly, the demand for yield in an ultra-low interest rate
environment is encouraging shifts into areas such as peer-to-peer
lending, SME-related finance, and into funds that offer debt of
varying maturities and sizes in a world where banks have
retreated to the sidelines, at least for the moment.
“It seems that everybody is interested in it,” Mark Fitzpatrick,
managing partner at Glide Capital, a
Miami, Florida-based firm focusing on areas such as private
loans, told Family Wealth Report. “Our business is going
out there and finding family offices, RIAs and others that want
to add private credit to their portfolios but who don’t have the
teams to do it.”
“We like small business lending and real estate lending,” he
said. Maturities of loans tend to be measured in months, not
years.
An issue, however, is that with some wealth managers leaving
large banks in recent years and heading to RIAs and setting up on
their own, they lack some of the old information and depth of
data to help source new deals for clients, which is where a firm
such as Glide, and its ability to due to the necessary due
diligence and analysis, comes in, Fitzpatrick continued. (To see
another story about Glide, click
here.)
Private capital - a term that can cover debt, equity, real estate
and infrastructure - is on the rise. Relatively illiquid
compared with listed stocks and widely-traded credits, the
premium that investors are paid for such illiquidity is
attractive because interest rates are on the floor (although
starting to creep higher, perhaps). Data from Preqin, the research firm,
points to the trend. Through 2016, 130 private debt funds secured
an aggregate $92 billion in investor commitments, falling from
$97 billion raised in 2015, but is greater than in any other year
since 2008.
According to figures from the Alternative Credit Council and
Deloitte in 2016, the private credit market grew from $440
billion in 2015, to $560 billion (source: Financing the Economy
2016). In Europe, a boost is coming from institutional capital.
In the US, the sector is by far the largest, in terms of total
size and new assets raised. The research found that most
financing is going to businesses with pre-tax profits of $10
million or more. Most loans are greater than $5 million in size
and half are in the $25 million-$100 million range. In
comparison, bond market financing, a common form of non-bank
finance for larger corporates, is in the $100 million-$300
million range.
Private credit covers a multitude of channels including areas
such as peer-to-peer lending platforms where conventional banks
are taken out of the equation. This whole area is sometimes
dubbed “alternative finance”, attracting the interest of the
wider financial industry, and regulators. In the case of the
latter, a concern may be that this is an area yet to be fully
tested by a recession.
A number of participants operate in this market and one theme has
been of how former bank employees have, since the 2008 financial
crisis, taken their skills from large trading floors to create
their own boutiques. Examples include the likes of Firebreak
Capital (see an interview
here) and BroadRiver Asset Management (see
here).
Can a good thing last?
A thought that comes up is that if there is a weight of money
that eventually comes in from large institutions such as pension
funds and life insurers, the influx of demand is going to force
down returns, encouraging more strategies and push investors up
the risk curve, leading potentially to disappointment and a
period of lackluster performance. The hedge fund industry
saw big institutional inflows over a decade ago, and a relatively
feral beast turned into a domestic tabby cat. Could the same
process repeat itself?
“When you see pension funds and others get into this you are
going to see more pressure on this space,” Bob Press, founding
partner, TCA, told this
news service. For example, the TCA Global Credit Master Fund, one
of the TCA offerings, is a predominately short-duration, absolute
return fund specializing in senior secured lending and advisory
services to small-caps located mainly in the US, Canada, Western
Europe and Australia.
“We have capacity constraints on everything we do. We know that
strategies can’t be run above certain levels,” Press
said.
Wealth houses have definitely got a strong appetite for private
credit, as demonstrated by the number of family office
organizations at a recent US conference attended by Elissa
Kluever, of Omni
Partners, a specialist investment house with offices in
California and London. Kluever is a partner and MD, credit &
lending funds, based usually in the UK. “What I saw was a lot of
interest in private credit from single family offices,
multi-family offices, wealth managers in attendance, thinking of
how to enter this space and grow exposure in a thoughtful way,”
she told this publication.
Omni has rolled out a number of funds in the private capital
space, getting interest and capital from family offices along the
way. “They are desperately seeking yield without taking undue
risk,” Kluever said.
Traditional areas of credit, including municipal bonds, have seen
yields come under pressure, encouraging a push into the private
space, she said.
“Family offices tend to be early adopters,” she said. Her firm
continues to launch a fund focused on this market each year.
Asked about whether yields might be compressed if the asset class
goes more “mainstream,” Kluever responded: “I’m convinced that a
wall of money will come.”
Small- and medium-sized enterprise lending has the most potential
to attract big institutional money; already returns on such
credit on the safer end of the spectrum are starting to come down
toward the 4-5 per cent range, she said. Family offices and other
wealth managers could be encouraged to look to other areas, such
as commodity trade finance, intellectual property, litigation
finance and other sectors that aren’t as scalable,” she
continued.
An issue for any investor is to realize that private credit is
relatively illiquid and participants must beware liquidity
mismatches of the sort recently highlighted when a number of
UK-based commercial property funds shut their doors to
redemptions immediately after markets were hit by the UK’s Brexit
vote last June, she said. “Education is a big piece of what we do
and we’re on an early journey on this,” she added.
Pipeline
“The drivers of [private credit] we have seen over the last three
to five years haven’t changed much,” TCA’s Press said, referring
to the departure of banks from some forms of business and
personal lending. The interest rate environment remains as it is,
he added.
TCA’s strategies are very specific with a focus on relatively
short-term loans. One of its strategies, for example, targets a
loan size of $1-5 million with a net return to investors of 8-12
per cent seeking a duration of mainly one or year or less;
another product TCA looks to ticket sizes of $5, $10 and $15
million returns fall into the range of 15-20 per cent over
maturities out to 2 to 3 years, but with a slightly different
profile.
There seems little doubt that private credit is seen as a
potentially busy area for wealthy clients seeking yield. As is so
often the case, the early-adopter investors look set to be among
the winners and it may be that the party will start to get
crowded once the big institutional players come through the door