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Introduction

A tale of rising sophistication among LPs

The retrenchment of banks from middle-market corporate lending after the 2008 global financial crisis (GFC) kick-started the rise of alternative credit1 as an investment opportunity for investors looking to diversify their portfolios. Traditional banks had to reduce their lending activity, as they shored up their balance sheets, which created a multi-trillion dollar funding gap for businesses globally.2

Consequently, institutional investors stepped in to fill the void and capitalize on new opportunities via direct lending, working with alternative credit managers. The growth and structuring of the successful private equity markets was the obvious starting point.

That was the beginning of the story for many investors, but in the almost two decades that have followed, the market has undergone rapid expansion. For instance, the Alternative Credit Council, part of the Alternative Investment Management Association (AIMA), estimates that global traditional private credit assets under management were US$3.5 trillion at the end of 2024.3

And the alternative credit universe has matured to encompass a diverse group of underlying strategies including infrastructure debt, commercial real estate debt (CRE debt), special situations/distressed debt, asset-based lending (ABL) including niche areas like NAV loans and collateralized loan obligations (CLOs). As it has grown and matured, alternative credit shifted from an optional holding to a core building block of many investors’ portfolios. And their allocations look set to become more sophisticated and multi-faceted in the years ahead.

But at the same time as the alternative credit industry grows and matures, it is also now increasingly in the media crosshairs as reporters try to better understand the asset class. Last year, complex financing arrangements at two US companies, Tricolor and First Brands, exploded into the mainstream news. This kicked off a heated debate about the roles and overlap between bank syndication, private credit, off balance sheet loans and ultimately the quality of underwriting.

Our latest study, which surveys 135 senior investment professionals4 at investors globally, along with in-depth interviews with investment executives at leading pensions, insurers, family offices and consulting firms, explores the future trajectory of alternative credit investing by a range of allocators. It sheds light on the next phase of diversification within alternative credit, shifting approaches to portfolio construction and expectations for the future of the asset class.



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