Private Credit, Explained

What is private credit?

Private credit refers to loans made to companies by nonbank lenders, typically through privately negotiated agreements rather than public bond markets. These loans are not traded on exchanges and are often extended to midsized or “middle‑market” businesses that may be too small, too complex, or too specialized for traditional bank financing.

On the risk‑return spectrum, private credit sits between public fixed income and private equity. Investors are compensated primarily through income, not ownership stakes, and accept lower levels of liquidity than public credit offers in exchange for greater structural protections and (potentially) higher yields. Investors tend to incur higher costs to access private credit than for bond mutual funds or ETFs.

How does the private credit market work?

Private credit strategies are typically executed through pooled investment vehicles that raise capital from investors and deploy it to portfolios of loans. Portfolio managers source deals directly, negotiate terms with borrowers, and typically hold loans through maturity.

Key characteristics include:

  • Direct origination. Lenders work one‑on‑one with borrowers rather than buying securities in public markets.
  • Customized terms. Loan structures may include collateral, floating interest rates tailored to each deal, and covenants, or financial rules that the borrower needs to follow while the loan is outstanding.
  • Active oversight. Managers monitor their loans on an ongoing basis, and the renegotiation of loan terms can be part of the return equation, often due to growth or stress in the borrower’s business.