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Private Credit Funds Cut Loan Values as Stress Rises

LONDON, May 12 (Reuters) - Private credit funds have marked down more than a tenth of ​their loans by at least 50%, new data from MSCI ‌showed, as corporate borrowers in this $3.5 trillion market struggle with growing debt burdens.

MSCI said in a report released on Tuesday that a loan valuation of less than 50% ​was "a level typically associated with deep distress or risk of ​restructuring," citing a sustained period of relatively high interest rates ⁠as one reason borrowers were struggling.

In recent days, big players in private ​debt including Carlyle, Blackstone and BlackRock have cut the value of their credit ​funds and regulators have warned about systemic risks arising from major banks lending to these asset managers.

Some of the main findings from the MSCI report.

  • MSCI's data showed that private ​credit funds' loan writedowns were at the highest level since the ​aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • Smaller private debt funds were experiencing the most borrower distress, ‌MSCI found, ⁠with 13% of their loans now valued below 50 cents on the dollar.

  • MSCI's writedown data was collected in the third quarter of 2025, the most recent available from private credit funds that often report performance with ​a long lag.

  • Delayed ​reporting by private ⁠debt funds had contributed to the trend of investors cashing out of stock market-traded credit vehicles known as ​business development corporations (BDCs), MSCI said.

  • Private debt funds' returns slumped ​to 1.8% ⁠in the fourth quarter of 2025 from 3.7% six months earlier according to MSCI's calculation method that separates investment performance from the money funds receive ⁠from ​investors or pay out.

  • In a survey accompanying ​this report, MSCI found that a third of investors said they lacked access to private market ​data that they fully trusted.

Reporting by Naomi Rovnick; Editing by Keith Weir

Source: Reuters


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