Private credit is no longer an emerging allocation. It is a permanent part of institutional portfolios. The question today is not whether it belongs, but which managers can justify that place as the market enters a more exacting phase.
That distinction matters because private credit is changing. The years of rapid expansion are giving way to a more demanding environment, one in which underwriting discipline, structural rigour and portfolio resilience will matter more than broad participation. Private credit remains attractive and structurally relevant, but the next phase of its development will reward judgement more than momentum.
This is not a broken model. It is a cyclical adjustment within a growing market. Lower M&A volumes have pushed some larger managers into adjacent market segments, increasing competition and putting pressure on pricing, margins and terms. At the same time, economic uncertainty, geopolitical tension and AI are making cashflows harder to forecast. Markets always become more revealing when conditions are less forgiving. In private credit, they reveal whether discipline has been real or merely rhetorical.
That is why downside-focused investors should be asking a simple question: have portfolios been built with enough rigour to withstand a market in which assumptions are tested more often, and more severely?
Three risks now sit at the centre of the private credit debate: liquidity, technology and geopolitics.
Liquidity comes first because private credit is designed to be held, not traded. The growth of semi-liquid structures is a sign of a maturing market, but only if fund terms, redemption tools and valuation processes are aligned with the underlying assets. When they are not, tension emerges quickly.
Technology is the second pressure. AI is not simply a productivity story; it is beginning to challenge underwriting assumptions, particularly in software and technology-enabled businesses. In some cases the pressure is on margins, pricing power or competitive position. In others, it may reach deeper into the business model itself. That makes ongoing portfolio review every bit as important as new origination.
Geopolitics completes the trio, although its influence is often indirect. Uncertainty around rates, energy costs, supply chains and inflation feeds into cost bases, margins and refinancing risk. For borrowers carrying high leverage, expensive debt or thin cashflow, those pressures can become acute quickly.
The most important point, however, is that risk in private credit is not uniform. It varies by strategy, fund structure, market segment, team experience and portfolio construction. Broad claims about the asset class, whether optimistic or pessimistic, miss that central truth.
The financing gap remains open
For all that, private credit remains deeply relevant because the financing need it addresses is structural rather than cyclical. Banks are not designed to fund every acquisition, refinancing or bolt-on that a private company may require. Many borrowers need flexibility, speed and lenders that understand how businesses move through cycles.
At its best, private credit is not bank debt at a higher price. It is negotiated finance, tailored to a borrower’s risk profile, capital needs and operating realities.
The next phase will reward managers that can demonstrate how they lend, not simply where they lend.
For investors, that means testing a manager’s underwriting and structuring approach against its track record. What level of leverage is acceptable, and why? How are covenants designed? How much equity support sits beneath the loan? Has discipline on sector selection and documentation held as competition has intensified? These are not technical footnotes. They are the foundations of capital preservation and risk-adjusted returns.
A manager is defined not only by the assets it backs, but by the risks it declines.
Diversification deserves the same scrutiny. For investors allocating across several managers, club deals and overlapping exposures can create concentrations that are not immediately visible at fund level. Genuine diversification requires a line-by-line understanding of borrower, sector and geographic exposure, rather than reliance on labels alone.
The managers best placed for private credit’s next phase will be those able to adapt without compromising discipline: close enough to borrowers to identify change early, selective enough to walk away when risk is mispriced, and experienced enough to support businesses through more demanding conditions.










