Leaving PIMCO.com

You are now leaving the PIMCO website.

Skip to Main Content
Investment Strategies

Active Management Comes for Private Credit

As direct lending matures and other private credit areas expand, active investors can apply relative value strategies across sectors – and even entire markets – to pursue enhanced outcomes.

Private credit was once the wild frontier of finance. An outgrowth of prior booms in junk bonds, leveraged buyouts, and private equity, private credit evolved as a niche of nonbank lenders providing privately negotiated, floating-rate loans to highly leveraged companies.

Then, the global financial crisis (GFC) set off a rare confluence of forces that accelerated private credit’s growth. Massive government fiscal stimulus, near-zero interest rates, stricter bank regulations, and a surge of capital in search of yield combined to encourage aggressive lending outside of the traditional banking system. Investors rushed in, chasing outsized returns.

But like all frontiers, corporate direct lending has grown more crowded and less differentiated over time. The era of “easy money” has faded as interest rates have risen. We believe the flood of investor capital in response to strong historical returns has caught up with available opportunities.

Corporate direct lending, still the largest private credit sector, now looks much more like the broadly accessible syndicated bank loan market and less like the relatively exclusive, outsized return opportunity it was perceived to be years ago – yet it still carries higher fees, less liquidity, and fewer exit ramps for investors. In our view, the old private credit playbook of the post-GFC era, based mainly on providing access to corporate direct lending via semi-liquid vehicles, no longer feels sufficient.

The real story in private credit today is the shift from access to active management. We believe the new playbook is about unlocking potential opportunities through active, relative value strategies – comparing risk and reward across subsectors, and even across entire markets, and allocating capital accordingly.

Opportunities have expanded

In today’s environment – as banks adjust to higher rates, evolving regulations, and real estate strains – private credit has blossomed beyond corporate lending into a sprawling ecosystem touching nearly every corner of the economy. Private credit markets are now large and diverse enough to offer a spectrum of risk profiles and valuations and encourage relative value strategies.

Areas of growth include asset-based finance, which provides funding across the global economy through residential mortgage credit, consumer credit, and non-consumer lending, often secured by hard assets as collateral. Real estate lending is another increasingly dynamic area. 

We believe a relative value approach is even more important at a time of rising interplay between publicly traded and private credit, evident in the overlap of asset types available in each market, fund-flow dynamics, and growing interest in trading platforms for private assets.

A limited, zero-sum view of this interplay is that private credit may stand to steal share from public credit markets. We take a more expansive view. More than ever, investors can now pick and choose across the credit spectrum to find investments that they believe offer the best risk-adjusted return potential.

A more versatile toolkit

Today, we find that public and private markets are not rivals, but rather complementary tools in an investor’s toolkit. Investment managers who operate solely in either public or private markets tend to promote only their own approach. By contrast, active managers with access to both markets can offer unbiased views and pursue opportunities based on their relative attractiveness at any given time.

Where are the potential opportunities today? We believe asset-based finance stands out, as do some areas of real estate lending. We favor a mix of fixed- and floating-rate assets. We find higher-quality, private, consumer-related credit to be more attractive than most forms of corporate credit, due to a combination of stronger lending standards, lower starting leverage levels, and favorable valuations.

In our view, the days of passive exposure to the market’s wild frontier are over. Now, in a more mature and complex market, it’s about being discerning and nimble. Applying an eye for value and time-tested active management strategies can help unlock private credit’s full potential.

(For more, please read “Active Management Comes for Private Credit: In-Depth Investment Approaches”)

Featured Participants

Tell us a little about you to help us personalize the site to your needs.

Terms and Conditions

Please read and acknowledge the following terms and conditions:

{{!-- Populated by JSON --}}

Select Location


Americas

Asia Pacific

  • Japan

Europe, Middle East & Africa

  • Europe
Back to top