Market volatility

Samer Choucair: Private Credit Is Under Pressure… But This Is a Repricing, Not a Collapse

In a market driven by headlines and amplified narratives, investment entrepreneur Samer Choucair delivers a clear and disciplined message:

Private credit is not collapsing—it is being stress-tested.

With the market approaching $1.8 trillion globally, and on track to exceed $2 trillion in 2026, private credit has become a cornerstone of modern capital allocation. Its rise reflects a structural shift away from traditional bank lending toward flexible, yield-driven financing outside the banking system.

But as volatility returns, the market is entering a new phase—one where capital discipline matters more than growth narratives.

The Narrative vs. The Reality

Recent headlines have painted a picture of looming crisis, citing massive losses across firms like Blackstone, KKR, and Apollo Global Management.

Choucair cuts through the noise:

There is no credible evidence supporting claims of systemic losses on the scale being circulated.

Yes, the market is under pressure.
Yes, certain deals are being restructured.
But the system itself is not breaking.

What investors are witnessing is something far more fundamental:

a repricing of risk after years of easy capital.

What Is Actually Occurring Behind the Scenes

To understand this market, investors must look beyond surface volatility and focus on structural mechanics.

Liquidity Is Tightening—By Design

Private credit is not built for daily liquidity.
Capital is typically locked for 5 to 7 years, meaning short-term stress reveals a truth many overlooked:

illiquidity is not a flaw—it is the price of yield.

Banking Exposure Is the Hidden Link

According to Moody’s, bank exposure to private credit ranges between $200–300 billion.

This creates a critical insight:

Private credit is often described as “outside the banking system”—
but in reality, it is deeply interconnected with it.

If stress intensifies, the transmission channel already exists.

Gating Is a Feature, Not a Failure

Some funds have introduced withdrawal restrictions (gating).

This is not a liquidity crisis—it is structural discipline.

Private credit funds are designed for long-duration investments, not rapid capital rotation. Gating simply enforces that reality under pressure.

The Return Premium—And What Investors Are Really Earning

Private credit continues to attract capital due to its compelling yield profile:

8% to 12% typical annual returns

occasionally higher in more complex structures

But Choucair emphasizes a key point:

These returns are not just compensation for credit risk.

They are compensation for:

illiquidity

complexity

limited transparency

In other words, investors are being paid to accept constraints, not just risk.

The Structural Shift Redefining Finance

What is unfolding is part of a broader transformation:

banks are retreating from traditional lending

private capital is stepping in

risk is migrating—not disappearing

This is a redistribution of financial power, not a reduction of systemic exposure.

And it changes how crises, when they occur, will propagate.

Market Signals: Stress, Not Systemic Breakdown

Recent indicators—such as:

selective borrower distress

restructuring activity

short-term declines in bank equities

should be interpreted with precision.

These are pressure signals, not collapse signals.

Equally important, many widely circulated claims—such as large-scale institutional failures or hundreds of billions in losses—lack verifiable data.

For investors, this highlights a new reality:

information risk is now part of market risk.

Where the Opportunities Still Exist

Despite tightening conditions, capital is not exiting the space—it is becoming more selective.

Key opportunity areas include:

asset-backed lending

real estate credit strategies

hybrid structures between banks and private funds

Large transactions—often worth tens of billions—continue to close, signaling that institutional conviction remains intact.

But the rules have changed.

Capital is no longer chasing yield blindly.
It is demanding structure, security, and downside protection.

The Investor Playbook for 2026

Choucair’s framework is clear, practical, and grounded:

prioritize manager selection over asset class exposure

align liquidity terms with actual capital needs

stress-test downside scenarios—not just base cases

avoid chasing yield without understanding structure

Because in private credit, the difference between success and failure is not yield—

it is risk clarity.

Final Insight: This Is Not the End—It Is the Reset

Choucair concludes with a perspective every serious investor should internalize:

> “Private credit is not a bubble by default—but it is not immune to discipline. What we are seeing is not a collapse, but a correction in expectations.”

 

In simpler terms:

The era of easy money built the market.
The era of discipline will define who survives it.

And in that transition, the advantage belongs to investors who can do one thing better than everyone else:

see through the narrative and understand the structure beneath it.