What Tighter Spreads and Rising Risks Reveal About Today’s Trade-off
Private credit’s remarkable growth phase appears to be stabilizing. The asset class expanded from $400 billion in 2010 to approximately $2.3 trillion by 2025. However, current market signals suggest potential challenges ahead. Notably, the increasing competition and evolving risk dynamics in private credit are reshaping investor expectations and market behavior. Key metrics from recent analyses indicate three critical disruptions at play.
Market Size Evolution
Source: Fitch Ratings Private Credit Recovery Study 2025
The growth trajectory of private credit has seen incremental shifts:
- 2010: $400 billion
- 2015: $700 billion
- 2020: $1.2 trillion
- 2025: $2.3 trillion
- Projected 2026: Expected to stabilize around $2.5 trillion
The Three Core Disruptions
Disruption 1: Capital Oversaturation – “Too Much Cash Flow”
Primary Data Source: Preqin Global Private Debt Report 2025
The influx of capital continues to saturate the private credit market, creating a highly competitive environment that compresses returns.
- Dry Powder Accumulation: As of Q4 2025, there is approximately $450 billion in undeployed private debt capital.
- Fundraising Trends: Private debt funds have raised over $210 billion in 2025, continuing a pattern of rapid inflows.
- Competitive Landscape: Average deal multiples rose from 6.2x EBITDA in 2019 to 8.5x EBITDA by 2025.
Disruption 2: Covenant Deterioration – “Insufficient Investor Protection”
Primary Data Source: S&P LCD Quarterly Review Q4 2025
The quality of borrower protections has continued to deteriorate due to fierce competition among lenders.
- Covenant-Lite Loans: These now account for 90% of new private credit issuances (up from 75% in 2019).
- Financial Maintenance Covenants: Only 20% of new deals include strong maintenance covenants (down from 40% in 2019).
- EBITDA Add-backs: Average add-backs have increased to about 20% of core EBITDA, compared to 15% in 2019.
Recovery Rate Impact: Source: Fitch Ratings Private Credit Recovery Study 2025
- Historical Recovery Rates: For covenant-heavy structures, recovery rates have historically been around 65-70%; for covenant-lite structures, expectations have dropped to 40-50%.
Disruption 3: Sector Concentration Risk
Primary Data Source: PitchBook Private Market Navigator 2025 / McKinsey Global Institute AI Impact Study 2025
Private credit’s heavy allocation towards technology sectors poses significant risks amid rapid shifts in technology.
- Technology Services Exposure: 40% of private credit AUM is linked to tech-enabled companies, raising concerns of overexposure.
- AI Influence: As automation and AI disrupt services, projections indicate that up to 60% of software development tasks could be automated by 2027, creating volatility in earnings and cash flows.
Comparative Risk-Return Analysis
Current Yield Environment
Source: Bloomberg Fixed Income Indices, December 2025
| Asset Class | Current Yield | Liquidity | Covenant Quality | Volatility |
| Private Credit | 8.5-11.0% | None | Weak (90% Cov-Lite) | High |
| High Yield Bonds | 7.8-9.2% | Daily | Standard | Moderate |
| Investment Grade | 4.5-6.0% | Daily | Strong | Low |
Risk-Adjusted Returns (Sharpe Ratio Equivalent):
- Private Credit: 0.30 (adjusted for even higher hidden volatility)
- High Yield Bonds: 0.42
- Investment Grade: 0.58
Interest Coverage Ratio Trends
Source: Moody’s Private Credit Monitor Q4 2025
There is a notable decline in the debt service capacity of private credit borrowers:
- 2019: Average Interest Coverage Ratio (ICR) at 3.2x
- 2023: Reduced to 2.4x
- Current 2025: 2.1x
Critical thresholds indicate distress levels, with 38% of private credit borrowers currently under an ICR of 2.0x.
The Math of Spread Compression
Based on Bloomberg Fixed Income Indices & Historical Loss Data
The dynamics of risk and return have materially shifted:
- Identified Risk Premium:
- Historical (2015-2018): Risk Premium = 600-800 bps – Expected Loss Rate
- Current (2025): Risk Premium = 200-300 bps – Expected Loss Rate (approximately 180 bps) = 20-120 bps net premium.
This represents an 85% reduction in net risk premium compared to historical averages, while underlying risks have increased.
Conclusion: The New Risk-Return Reality
The private credit landscape is markedly changing. Increased capital oversaturation—as detailed in the Preqin Global Private Debt Report 2025—alongside deteriorating covenants (S&P LCD Quarterly Review Q4 2025), and heightened sector concentration risk identified in the PitchBook Private Market Navigator 2025 have reshaped the value proposition. As private credit yields compress to uncertain net premiums relative to borrower health (Moody’s Private Credit Monitor Q4 2025; Bloomberg Fixed Income Indices), public fixed income gains distinct advantages in transparency, liquidity, and reliability. This reliability is further underscored by superior recovery profiles noted in the Fitch Ratings Private Credit Recovery Study 2025. With a well-established market infrastructure and a range of options for investors, fixed income remains an attractive avenue, offering not only stability but also opportunities for growth in an evolving financial landscape—but with yields tightening across the board, are investors ready to prioritize liquidity over illiquidity premiums?
Preqin Global Private Debt Report 2025
Covenant Analysis: S&P LCD Quarterly Review Q4 2025
Sector Concentration: PitchBook Private Market Navigator 2025
Interest Coverage Ratios: Moody’s Private Credit Monitor Q4 2025
Technology Disruption Metrics: McKinsey Global Institute AI Impact Study 2025
Yield Comparisons: Bloomberg Fixed Income Indices, December 2025
Recovery Rate Analysis: Fitch Ratings Private Credit Recovery Study 2025

