StepStone Group is pushing back on a wave of negative headlines about direct lending in private credit markets, arguing that much of the noise conflates different credit segments and overstates systemic risk, potentially misleading investors.
Instead, the firm’s latest whitepaper, “Cutting through the noise in direct lending,” stresses that fundamentals across traditional middle-market direct lending remain intact even as headlines highlight isolated stress points.
Recent commentary has spotlighted terms like “shadow” default rates, broadly defined measures that can include payment-in-kind (PIK) interest, covenant waivers and maturity extensions, as though they signal widespread distress. But StepStone notes that these do not equate to actual defaults, serving instead as tools lenders use to stabilize credits during temporary underperformance. Payment defaults, while ticked up from unusually low post-pandemic levels, remain modest by historical standards.
On valuations, the firm points out that direct lending marks loans using fundamental credit analysis rather than short-term market pricing, meaning these valuations tend to reflect long-run value rather than transient swings seen in traded markets. Historical data suggests conservative treatment—markdowns during stress periods often exceed realized losses by significant multiples.
StepStone also challenges narratives around BDC redemptions: while outflows have increased in some products, most vehicles still record net inflows and have met redemption requests without distress sales. Moreover, yield moderation largely reflects lower base rates and tighter credit spreads—not deteriorating asset quality.
The post Ignore the Noise: Direct Lending Isn’t Breaking appeared first on Connect Money.
