- Pimco analysts warn direct-lending vehicles are overdue for a major default cycle.
- Private credit funds face heightened risk due to loose underwriting and heavy exposure to software firms.
- Investor redemptions are pressuring semi-liquid private debt vehicles.
- Asset-based finance within private credit may offer lower risk and stable returns.
Private Credit: At a Crossroads
Bloomberg reports that Pimco, a major global investment manager, is raising concerns about the private credit sector’s resilience. The firm warns that rapid growth in direct lending could expose deeper weaknesses. Direct-lending vehicles expanded quickly after the 2008 financial crisis. However, Pimco analysts now believe the sector may face a broad default cycle. Such a cycle could test these funds under both industry-specific stress and wider macroeconomic pressure.
At the same time, defaults have started to rise across parts of the market. This trend has intensified scrutiny of underwriting standards and due diligence practices. Many direct lenders increased exposure to riskier industries during the boom years. In particular, software companies have become a major borrower base for private credit funds. Analysts warn that this concentration could amplify losses if economic conditions deteriorate.
Redemption Pressure and Liquidity Concerns
Recent investor unease has surfaced in business development companies (BDCs) and semi-liquid private debt vehicles. These products have faced redemptions beyond contractual limits. As a result, firms like BlackRock and Blue Owl Capital have gated investor withdrawals. Pimco analysts stress that semi-liquid does not mean fully liquid. Investors must understand the limits on accessing capital as conditions tighten. The pressure also comes as broader CRE uncertainty continues to weigh on investor activity across multiple capital markets.
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Asset-Based Finance Seen as Safer Lane
Not all private credit is seen as equally risky. Pimco highlights asset-based finance within the private credit market as an area offering more stable, investment-grade-like risk profiles compared to direct lending. With more than $7B raised for this strategy in the past year, Pimco is positioning itself to focus on these potentially safer instruments for institutional and high-net-worth clients.
What to Watch
As the $1.8T private credit industry matures, investors and managers will need to monitor performance closely, especially given heightened software exposure and redemption risks. Pimco’s shift in strategy may signal broader changes ahead for private credit, particularly as traditional risk-return assumptions are tested in the coming cycle.


