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The Credit Market Lens

The Credit Market Lens: Differing Signals in BDCs, and Orderly Defaults in High Yield

How equity and credit investors are reassessing BDC valuations differently – and why high yield defaults continue to play out primarily through distressed exchanges.
The Credit Market Lens: Differing Signals in BDCs, and Orderly Defaults in High Yield
The Credit Market Lens: Differing Signals in BDCs, and Orderly Defaults in High Yield
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 | {read_time} min read

Key takeaways:

  • Sentiment around business development companies (BDCs) has rebounded recently, although stock prices continue to reflect questions about reported net asset values (NAVs), while credit investors have required extra compensation.
  • Large gaps in how similar loans are marked across BDCs are a reminder that private credit valuations can lag and shouldn’t be taken at face value.
  • In the high yield bond market, defaults are happening but in a managed way, with most issuers opting for negotiated restructurings rather than disorderly bankruptcies.
Sentiment toward BDCs – funds that invest in small and midsize private U.S. businesses – has improved since early March. BDC bond spreads have stabilized and outperformed the broader investment grade (IG) index, suggesting credit investors are increasingly comfortable with downside risk. Publicly listed BDC equities have also rebounded (see Figure 1). Despite the strong co-movement in recent weeks, however, the equity and credit narratives differ.

Figure 1: BDC bonds have enjoyed a stronger recovery than BDC equities this year

Source: Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 15 April 2026

On the equity side, the debate centers on NAV credibility. Investors remain skeptical of where portfolios are marked, and without better price discovery that skepticism is likely to persist.

Elevated dispersion in marks is part of the problem: For loans held across multiple BDCs, the gap between the most optimistic and most conservative managers exceeds five percentage points (see Figure 2). Rather than providing comfort, that spread signals uncertainty around true asset values and makes it harder for reported NAVs to serve as an anchor – hampering confidence in dividend sustainability and underlying earnings power.

Figure 2: Dispersion in price marks in BDC portfolios remains unusually wide

Source: PitchBook LCD, PIMCO as of 31 December 2025

Figure 3: In 2022–2023, private real estate vehicles diverged sharply from publicly traded REITs

Source: Bloomberg, NCREIF, PIMCO as of 31 December 2025

In credit, the story is different. Credit markets can be more anticipatory in some ways, demanding compensation against the risk of asset quality deterioration. To a large extent, this repricing has already occurred, with many BDC bonds trading at spread levels not too far from the index of BB bonds, the top rating tier in the high yield (HY) sector.

From here, further material spread widening would likely require a more acute shock that would most plausibly come from a reassessment of balance sheet liquidity risk, particularly among non-traded BDCs. For now, that risk appears contained and supported by structural guardrails, including fund redemption limits, access to bank credit facilities, the presence of liquid assets in portfolios, and principal payments from maturing loans.

Figure 4: The USD HY default rate has remained near its historical median for the past few years

Source: Moody’s Default and Recovery Database (DRD), PIMCO as of 31 March 2026

Against that backdrop, there were 20 issuer-level USD HY defaults over the first three months of 2026, according to Moody’s data, broadly in line with first quarter default counts in each of the prior three years. Importantly, distressed exchanges continue to account for the majority of default events (11 of the 20 so far this year) – a pattern that has persisted for roughly a decade (see Figure 5). A distressed exchange is an out-of-court restructuring in which an issuer offers creditors new securities or amended terms that are less favorable than originally promised (for example, a maturity extension, coupon reduction, or principal haircut) to avoid a payment default and a Chapter 11 filing.

Figure 5: Distressed exchanges continue to constitute a majority of defaults

Source: Moody’s DRD, PIMCO as of 31 March 2026

The preference for distressed exchanges reflects their typically lower frictions relative to Chapter 11. They can be executed more quickly, with less operational disruption and less headline risk, which can help preserve employee retention and enterprise value.

For investors, these dynamics often translate into higher recoveries than in-court restructurings, although outcomes ultimately depend on the issuer’s capital structure, collateral, and the depth of the underlying business deterioration.

Michael Puempel and Gabriel Cazaubieilh contributed to this report.

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