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Joe Weisenthal
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Tracy Alloway
Bloomberg audio studios podcasts radio news. Hello, and welcome to another episode of the Odd Lots podcast. I'm Tracy Alloway.
Joe Weisenthal
And I'm Joe Weisenthal.
Tracy Alloway
Joe, I think it's fair to say that if we didn't have the situation with Iran, we would be talking a lot more about private credit.
Joe Weisenthal
Yeah, yeah, for sure. Jamie Dimon, he talked about the cockroaches. We keep getting these headlines over the last several weeks, maybe months, various mini, you know, not blow ups per se, but mini something between a hiccup and a blow up. In some cases you hear about redemptions being slowed down, et cetera. Not great headlines and not great charts. Often too, when you look at the various publicly traded instruments that one would associate with private credit.
Tracy Alloway
Right. So I love that you said something between a hiccup and a blowup, because this is the difficulty I have in talking about the private credit space at the moment, which is you either find people who are often very close to the private credit industry or in it who will argue that this is just, you know, a tiny bump in the road. This is maybe a few cockroaches, like nothing to worry about, although a single cockroach would worry me in my own household. But. But anyway. Or you get doomsayers who are like, this is financial crisis 2.0. Right. And it's very difficult to find nuanced commentary in between.
Joe Weisenthal
Yeah, and we were always looking for nuanced commentary. So this is a problem for the Odd Lots podcast.
Tracy Alloway
That's right. Okay, so we're trying to rise to the occasion with some nuanced commentary on private credit. And trust me, I have watched and seen and read a lot of things on this topic. And one thing that stood out in particular to me was a particular seminar or lecture that came out from a firm called Osterweiss recently. And we had a couple of old school bond hands talking about the rise of private credit and how to think about it in the context of the history of the bond market. And this is something that I think is often missed is what exactly is private credit's role when. When you think about overall corporate credit.
Joe Weisenthal
That's a good way to put it.
John Sheehan
Right.
Joe Weisenthal
Because we can look at the various funds, et cetera, but within the broad history of the evolution of the bond market and within the current just sort of landscape of fixed income, like, what is private credit? The way I like to frame a lot of questions is from the perspective of the investor, what problem does the existence of private credit solve for their portfolio needs? Right. Because that is the consistent thing. We talked to endowment manager, we talk to investors, etc. Every instrument, in theory, like it solves some sort of problem. Maybe you have a lot of money that's locked up for a long time. It's like, okay, you're willing to trade that away for some extra premium, etc. What problem does private credit solve?
Tracy Alloway
Well, I was going to say also from the perspective of the issuer and from the issue. Right. Because the issuer, if you're a company looking for finance, you have a bunch of different choices. And one of the ones that has become very popular in recent years. Years is private credit. And in fact, you could. I mean, there's a dynamic here where both investors are demanding it, but issuers are also very, very happy to lend into that market for various reasons that we are about to get into.
Joe Weisenthal
Let's do it.
Tracy Alloway
All right, so we do in fact have the perfect guest. We're going to be speaking with John Sheehan. He is a portfolio manager for the Strategic Income Fund at Oster Vice. And Craig Manchuk, he is also a portfolio manager at the Strategic Income Fund. So thank you so much, John and Craig, for coming on Opbots.
Craig Manchuk
Thank you.
John Sheehan
Thanks for having us.
Tracy Alloway
So maybe just to begin with, how long have you guys been in the bond space?
John Sheehan
The Firm has had a fixed income strategy for 20 coming up on 24 years, actually started by our, one of our other partners, Carl Kaufman. Originally the firm here was started as an equity only firm. And as the firm's clients started to get older, founder John Osterweiss wanted to expand into the fixed income space, brought Carl in and the fund has been in operation since April of 2002.
Joe Weisenthal
What kind of fund is it when we're talking about it? Tell us about the general, the mandate and the structure of the fund and maybe who is like the sort of like the modal client for whom this would be a vehicle that they would put their money in.
John Sheehan
Sure. So the fund was set up to be the only fixed income fund that our private clients needed. So we have an extremely broad mandate, we can go anywhere. And so it was a very, very early unconstrained bond fund which has some distinct advantages and some distinct disadvantages.
Joe Weisenthal
Okay.
John Sheehan
Advantages are we get to go where we see the best opportunities, sort of our mantra is to look for the most attractive parts of the market and then we look for the least risky ways to play those most attractive parts at any given time. And so as the cycle changes, as business cycles are stronger, we would gravitate more towards credit and as it weakens, we could gravitate more towards Treasury. So the fund has over its life cycle moved back and forth. But by and large, since the financial crisis we've been largely in high yield, IG and convertible bonds. Our client base has predominantly been RIAs and wealth management firms and individuals. Some of those are existing private clients of the firm right now. So fund is about $5.8 billion and it is structured as a 40 act open end mutual fund.
Tracy Alloway
So once upon a time, if you were looking to invest in credit, say in 2002, you would have had a limited set of options. So you basically had investment grade, which are bonds issued by. People always use the word blue chip companies, which sounds so old fashioned to me nowadays. But companies with relatively strong balance sheets that are rated by the rating agencies as investment grade, or you would have the option of bonds in the high yield market, AKA junk. So companies with weaker balance sheets and weaker credit ratings tell us about how the sort of, I guess, menu of credit options has expanded post the 2008 financial crisis. That's basically a long winded way of me saying where does private credit come from?
Craig Manchuk
So private credit had been in existence prior to the financial crisis, but really saw expensive growth after the financial crisis. So if you go back into even the 80s with the growth of the high yield market. Prior to that, highly levered companies, companies that didn't have investment grade balance sheets couldn't really borrow much in the public markets. So either they financed internally or relied much more heavily on the bank market. As the high yield market grew, famously with the help of Milken, it allowed more companies, more highly levered companies to access public markets that evolved into the leveraged loan market. The leveraged loan market, once upon a time used to be held on the bank balance sheets. They began to syndicate those loans and what was really the step function there was the evolution of the CLO market where the banks could take those loans, put them into a securitized structure which became clos, which led to the growth there. Then after the financial crisis, the bank regulators really did not want banks lending to highly levered and or risky entities, both corporations and individuals. So you saw pretty strict capital requirements. There is an explicit prevention from banks lending to companies with greater than six times leverage. That created this need for lending outside of the bank market. Those companies didn't go away, their borrowing needs didn't end. So that vacuum was created by private credit. So you saw many of the same entities that were lending in the private credit market previously in the private equity market. So they also saw a need to finance their LBOs that was no longer able to be done at the banks. So they started a number of different fund structures. The BDC fund structure had been around prior to the financial crisis, but these dedicated private credit funds really began to proliferate after the financial crisis.
John Sheehan
Can I just add something to that, just from an historical perspective? I also think that we've been talking about private credit as it stands today, but it started so much earlier and it started in an area that I think most people will tend to forget about, which is GE Capital was one of the largest providers of private credit under the GE umbrella for many, many, many years. They were financing lots of different things though. They were financing rail cars, they were financing aircraft engines, they were financing the purchase of MRIs and other healthcare equipment. And they were extraordinarily successful and really largely responsible for a big chunk of the profits that came in underneath the GE umbrella for many years. But what it did is it created a large body of really experienced lenders who ultimately splintered off and went into different areas in the businesses. And one of the businesses that that started from them was a company called Heller Financial, which had been around for a while, but they hired some GE Capital guys to come in and they really kind of took the original Heller business, which was financing yellow equipment and rail cars and things into the middle market LBO space. So they became critical providers of financing for that space at a time when there really weren't many away from the banks. So a lot of this has been around for a long time. People just forget about it because there's not as. Not as many people out there that are as old as we are, that remember those guys from the 80s and 90s.
Craig Manchuk
You saw that with a lot of the consolidation of the financial institutions. So away from ge, you know, CIT was a big lender in that space, even in the aircraft lending space. An organization ILFC was owned by aig, and the regulators wanted that highly levered, riskier financing out of the systematically important financial institutions.
Tracy Alloway
Well, speaking of people not realizing some of the history here, it took me an embarrassingly long amount of time to realize that all the stories that I'd written about shadow banking in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis were basically private credit.
Joe Weisenthal
Yeah, it's interesting to think about. Like, I'm familiar to some extent. I don't know the full history of like GE Capital, but I had certainly heard of it. I knew that it became a big profit center for GE itself. And it would make sense that a company like GE or GM even, but GE would have its own lending arm and then like do its own financing on the side. But I never really thought of it as like private credit per se. But it's interesting to hear that, yeah, like this was like an origin that a lot of the lending form types, et cetera, that were sort of emerged out of these practices in house. Then where did it go from there? So you mentioned, okay, like real asset investing, maybe it's like aircraft lending or, you know, aircraft finance, etc. How did it splinter off into all of these different fields and areas beyond just the sort of like the tangible goods financing?
John Sheehan
So one of the places it went was in an area of mezzanine finance. And again, back in the early days of the LBO market, the sponsors were always looking for ways, how do we fill in the gaps? Like, we can't get this deal quite across the finish line with the equity we want to put in. Where do we fill in the gaps? And there were mezzanine funds and they were hybrids, somewhere between credit lenders and private equity investors. So they would take the most junior piece, typically a preferred or a subordinated piece of debt, and get a little bit of equity in the form of warrants or something alongside so that they were targeting slightly higher return profile than the typical debt guys were, but they weren't going to get the full bang for their buck that the PE guys were getting, and that lasted for a number of years. But as the market matured, the sponsors found that they no longer really needed the MEZ guys to the same degree. They're still around, but ultimately MEZ funds were niche kind of product that I think over time has just kind of been squeezed out between the size and scale of the combination of leveraged loans and high yield bonds. And the PE firms desires to keep as much of the equity economics themselves as they possibly could.
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Tracy Alloway
So today we're at a point where the private credit market there are all These different estimates for exactly how big it is. And you're going to get some variation because it is private, like the clue is in the name. But by most estimates it's bigger than the junk rated market, which is kind of crazy if you think about like how large the junk rated market has loomed in the market's collective consciousness for so long. How did we get to that particular point? How did we get to a point where this like relatively new market, although I take the point that it has intellectual roots before even the financial crisis, but why did it grow so quickly after 2008?
Craig Manchuk
I think there's two macro influences that had a large play in that. First, if you look back after the dot com meltdown in the equity market with three straight years of negative returns in the S and P, that was the first time that happened since the Great Depression. The cumulative returns of high yield for that 20 year period, 1999 to 2019, beat equities. So among investors there is a desire for something away from the equity market. Their experience in equities was unsatisfactory, so they were looking for other alternatives. And then in the later part of that time period, we went through the zero interest rate environment where the Fed, treasury, et cetera, drove interest rates to zero in response to Covid. So there is a massive desire for yield and better performing assets than they had in the early parts of the 2000s in the equity market. So that really led to the proliferation of the amount of dollars flowing into the product. And then on the supply side, we touched on it earlier. These highly levered borrowers were basically shut out of the banking lending market. So they needed to find alternatives to fund their businesses and to refinance their debt. So those two kind of came together at the same time and really fueled the growth of the product.
John Sheehan
And I think institutionally you had in the LBO world, sponsors were looking to have a real partner that they could go to repeatedly for all different types of transactions, go back to them again and again and develop a real relationship. And where they are, their lender could be very expedient as well. And I think expediency mattered and provide them with sort of that guaranteed financing which the banks were providing up until they were squeezed out from a regulatory standpoint on the most highly levered transactions. So I think that's what it really kind of comes down to is the ability to provide more leverage than the banks were allowed to without running afoul of the regulators.
Joe Weisenthal
So one thing that comes up regularly on the podcast is the sort of natural synergy between private credit and insurance and insurance companies. They have all these assets and they have this advantage that they know exactly when those assets will be withdrawn. It'll probably be in like 40 years from now. They do not have to worry at all about, you know, a quick run, whatever. And so they can harvest, they can harvest that illiquidity, illiquidity premium. They could put their money into assets that do not trade very much. And that it's very intuitive to, to me. Talk to us though. You're operating an unconstrained fund that is a publicly traded 40 act mutual fund. Talk to us about what it means. You know, you say you look for opportunity. Why are there private credit assets that aren't all locked up in these long term vehicles? Why does it sometimes make sense for private credit assets to be in a vehicle that is just sort of more opportunistic and has a daily quote Potentially
John Sheehan
we currently actually right now don't have any private credit. We were involved in it in the past but I think most of those opportunities have gone to the dedicated private credit funds. Because there's one of the structural differences of the way they're set up versus the way we're set up is we source our ideas mostly from investment banks. Now some of those investment banks used to come to us with transactions that weren't going to fly in the public market. So they would look and say this is a small deal. We're not going to be able to find buyers from this among our investors who are primarily benchmark high yield investors because it would be outside the index and it would be illiquid. And there's been a lot of talk about and problems with investing in illiquid securities. One of the real benefits of our strategy is we always have lots of liquidity. Liquidity. We have a historically have managed our portfolio in a short duration with a short duration focus that creates cash and we keep a lot of front end ballast. So as our portfolio is always creating cash, we could invest in some pockets of less liquid strategies but we haven't done that. The private credit guys are set up differently. They need a team of bankers to go out and source all their deals. They have to knock on companies doors. It's a very different way in their function of having to source their transactions to try to fill up the asset side of their portfolios. So because of that over time I think there's a huge structural difference between the way they approach it and the way we approach it. But just going back briefly to the Insurance company side. Insurance companies have long been investors in private assets and they used to have large teams of private debt investors. And ultimately over time what they've done is they've shrunken those teams and just said, here you guys source the transactions for us and then we'll give you guys the money and you can go do it yourselves sort of on an outsourced basis. So naturally it is a very good fit for them because they do have long duration assets and there's generally not a rush for those assets.
Tracy Alloway
Could you say a little bit more about how competitive it's been in the past to source private credit deals? If you're on the investor side? We hear these stories about, you know, basically private companies can kind of dictate the terms of the deals because there's so much overwhelming investor demand. And you get this vision of people like literally pounding down the door to get in on a particular loan. Was that accurate in the past?
Craig Manchuk
No. I think even the managers of private credit would tell you in honesty, maybe not on the record, that they're surprised how quickly this has grown. So if you look at some of these funds that have grown 10x over the last 5, 10 years, I don't think that they have grown their sourcing abilities by 5 to 10x. So if you contrast it to say private equity, the way a private equity fund works is they find the investment opportunity and then they go call the funds from their LPs, private credit. Most of these funds work where they take in the money first and then they go out and find the investments. And so they are under much more pressure to find investments, which creates this competitive environment that you alluded to. Some of the issuers that we talk to that may have been in the public markets in the past tell us that when they go to the private credit market, it's just a competition for who will jump the highest for the piece of meat. And what that translates to in the credit world is either lower interest rate, weaker covenants, or a combination of the both. And that that's really what you've seen with private credit in this hyper competitive environment that we're in now.
John Sheehan
One other thing that John mentioned which is actually really important here, so the structural side, this is the, this is what I'll liability side of the balance sheet for private credit guys is kind of critically important here. So if you're out there and you're raising an institutional fund, those institutional funds are generally drawdown funds. So they're allowed to go out market and say, okay, we've raised commitments for five or $10 billion. We're going to go out now and source our investments, which is the asset side. The LP commitments are the liability side. So they will take on those liabilities as they find the assets and they end up being matched. And this is in a structure that's typically got a term and it's locked up money that they were not, will not be providing liquidity liquidity for those institutional investors. The problem, and this is where we've run into the big problems and this is what is really circulating in around the media is more recently when we've gone and taken this out into these private BDC structures to market them to the retail or private wealth world in order to raise the money they've needed to offer some concessions on the liquidity. Right. Because it makes it easier to raise money. If you're going to allow people or you tell them that you're going to allow them to redeem at least somewhat periodically, that has allowed them to raise money really fast. It's a little bit piggy because they've just said, okay, we can raise a lot of money, let's just raise the money when we can. The difference is when those dollars come in, they come into the fund on a subscription basis and need to be invested quickly. And that's what's really created a lot of the problems and what's really led to the degradation of credit underwriting. Because if you don't invest those dollars quickly, it creates the lag on performance in the fund. Minute that dollar comes in, it's part of your nav.
Joe Weisenthal
Yeah.
John Sheehan
Therefore it needs to be invested rapidly in an income earning investment. So that's what's happened. And you really saw a huge proliferation of this. I mean the most obvious invisible of these you could see on there would be the Cliffwater Corporate Lending Fund, which is CCLFX on your Bloomberg. If you look that up, you can look at the asset growth in that and it really has taken off in the last five years. In 2022, we would speak to our wealth management advisors who are investors in our fund and ask them about what's working for them because in 2022, rates are going up. Investment grade bond funds are trading off sharply because people didn't understand the duration risk that they were carrying. High yield funds were weaker but nowhere near as bad as ig. And I'd say, what's working? They said, oh gosh, private credit's been working great. I would say, well that's wonderful. But that's because they're not taking their marks. And so they became very, very comfortable because they didn't have to turn around, talk to their existing investors and say, here, you lost a lot of money in this fund. It looks like you've just earned your yield and your nav has been very, very stable. So as a result, their clients were happy. They were happy. And what happened? Money poured in. So as that money poured in, it led to, I think more bad actors is too strong, but really more bad underwriting, weaker underwriting, more aggressive underwriting, because they needed to get that money put to work so they would provide more leverage at weaker terms.
Joe Weisenthal
Just. Can you clarify? Sorry. I think you explained it, but why is it that with the traditional private asset, not private, private asset model, that they only call on the capital once it's needed? Because they. What you explained is, okay, once you take in the capital, if it's not being invested, it's a Dragon nav. Very intuitive. Just explain why is that? Why with. Why is the other parts of the private capital world able to do the thing where you only call up the LPs when you have a deal, whereas that's not the case with private credit, where you take in the money up front.
John Sheehan
I just think it. It's what people are used to, and they've gotten used to in that model over the years as an institution, hey, I'll commit to your fund, tell me when you need the money and we'll send it in. And I think that's the way they do it now. Exactly how they do. Yeah. I don't know if that's a dollar for dollar thing or if they'll do it in just installments over time. But it does help to provide. It gives them the ability to have less drag by having, you know, you go out and raise a $5 billion fund, day one, that money's going to sit there if you.
Joe Weisenthal
No, no, I mean, it makes sense. I'm guessing what I'm trying to establish is why couldn't private credit work the same way, where it's like, okay, I go out and raise $5 billion worth of commitments, and then as I get a lending opportunity, then I call up my LPs and say, okay, you needed to pony up that $50 million to us that you've committed and whatever. Why couldn't it work that way?
Craig Manchuk
It could. I think it's the nature of the investment. So the traditional structure that Craig described is private equity. So if you think about an equity investment, you go out, you buy a company, you take over management Retool operations, you merge, you do whatever you do in private equity to increase value and then in three, five years you want to turn around and realize that investment where a lending business is more of a kind of balance sheet perpetual business where you're finding new loans all the time and you have loans maturing, redeploying the money. So the evergreen structure of an integral fund makes more sense.
Joe Weisenthal
That makes sense, yeah.
Craig Manchuk
So you typically have bigger bite sizes in private equity it's more heavily concentrated portfolio with a finite time frame. Whereas credit, it's like if you think of bank balance, this was funding that used to be funded by deposits in perpetuity on the bank balance sheet.
John Sheehan
I think the fact you have a much smaller number of investments, many, many small. I mean a typical private equity Fund can have 5 to 25 investments depending on its size. Whereas the typical private credit fund is going to have hundreds if not thousands of. So imagine having to make to call $50 four times, four times a week from your investor, each of your hundreds of thousands of it would be really cumbersome.
Craig Manchuk
And I think that also goes to the logic around the gates. That's been a pretty controversial topic. But think about a five year loan, right? You probably have 20% of your loans coming due every year. That's 5% a quarter. So the gates were put in there to address the fact that we have maturities every quarter that could be there to meet redemptions. That's where some of the 5% logic came from.
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Tracy Alloway
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John Sheehan
I think they're critical actually in the retail channel because you're protecting both sets of investors. It's not the asset side of the equation. It's not the loans that they're making that are the problem, it's the other side. So if you go back and just think about what happened at First Republic bank, they were owning Treasuries and they had $40 billion of redemption requests for their demand deposits go out the door in a few days and the business was sunk. So if you didn't have the gates up and you had a run on the private credit funds because people were unhappy, they got nervous, they got scared. You sink funds very, very easily that way. But what's important about it, and this is where we're going to get into a potentially thorny period as we move down the road, is these funds will either need to do one of two things. They'll either need to sell assets to meet their redemptions, or they'll have to finance the redemption requests, provided that the inflows that they've been seeing slowed down. Now, I think because of all the noise out there that we see in the media, people's confidence in the private credit space, certainly the retail investors confidence, the wealth manager's confidence has been shaken. So it wouldn't surprise me at all if we see those flows slow down. If that happens, then the net outflows will be potentially greater and they'll build. That means that these private credit managers will have to finance those or they'll have to sell assets. And the assets they sell are the ones that are probably the easiest to sell, which generally are the highest quality. So the concern here, and really where when people are worried about the contagion, the concern is you are left with a fund that has raised more debt to meet some redemptions, then been forced to redeem to sell more positions. And some of those are your better positions. So now you've got a more levered fund with poorer overall investment quality. Where does that stop? And at what point does that potentially blow up? Because, because candidly the private credit guys may sell the early sales there were from, we heard from Blue Owl into an insurance company. Okay, that's great. But I'll argue that we're just seeing the beginnings of the pools of assets being created that are going to take on some of the stressed or distressed loans in that space. And those, those loans are not going to be as easy to move. But you'll find somebody like an oak tree who typically does this at points of stress or distress. They'll go to their LPs and say, hey, we have a great opportunity. We want to raise $10 billion. And because over the years they've been really, really savvy about that, they're able to raise that money. So they'll create a special opportunities fund to go out and buy these particular private credit loans that are stressed or distressed. You need the expertise to go in and work out those loans and, and potentially either take and run the company from an equity standpoint or kick the can down the road and hopefully restructure and revise those loans. So I think that's where it really starts to get thorny. If we get into a protracted redemption cycle, the financing runs out and they have to start selling things. It starts to really cut into the bone.
Craig Manchuk
We do have a precedent for how the gates of interval funds have behaved over time. So if you go back to the commercial real estate market after Silicon Valley bank and First Republic bank, everyone was trying to pull their money out of large real estate interval funds. There's one famously that hit the gates and prevented redemptions. That fund now is, has kind of gotten to the other side. It actually had a better return than its credit fund last year. And people tend not to panic for longer than three, six months. Right. Human nature. Crisis is a day, a week, a month. But if it just stays there long enough, people tend to get cooler heads and it works itself out. But as Craig said, that'll help on the liability management side of these fund structures. It's not going to help on the asset side. So if the default rates start hitting some of these levels that people fear and or predict, it's not going to save you on the asset side of the equation. And then maybe to open up another topic, there's two parts of a default, right? There's when the company actually declares default and then what the creditors recover in bankruptcy. I think there's big fears around some of these recovery values that will be seen. Some of these are very highly levered companies with very few hard assets. So that's going to be the next test when we start getting it to work out of some of these loans. What do the creditors really have to protect them in bankruptcy?
Joe Weisenthal
I'm glad you said this because this is a perfect segue into the question I was going to go to next, which is, okay, we trace the history of private credit to physical things, the type of things that a GE would sell, maybe like a wind turbine or you know, get natural gas turbine, whatever it is, etc. And we were talking about the big megatrends of the 2000 and tens. And one of them was the regulatory push of loans off banks. Another one was zirp. But another one was the emergence of these predictable payment streams called software as a service subscriptions. This is the area in which you could really have zeros. A natural gas turbine is going to be worth something at the end. A obsolete software company is not going to be worth anything if the business has been destroyed thanks to AI. But what was the moment in which the credit guys suddenly realized that essentially here is this business that we used to never think of high tech. It used to be when, when I was a kid, tech and debt didn't go together. What was the moment that the credit guys sort of realized that these are financeable assets, so to speak, that could come into the debt world.
John Sheehan
Joe, you hit the nail on the head here because this is the spot where really the high yield market and the private credit market started to diverge the most. There have been issuers in the tech space and in the software space into high yield. But it's definitely been a more recent phenomenon. If you go back 10 years, there were not a lot of software issuers in the high yield space, largely because of that, because people couldn't get their arms around the typical, okay, I need to have two times asset coverage or two and a half times times asset coverage. We Just never saw that. So those companies finance themselves either in the equity market or they finance themselves in the convertible bond market. So we used to see a lot of that in the convertible bond market because these are growth companies. And so the convert market would say, okay, I'll accept a low coupon because I'm going to have equity participation on the upside. And so my upside isn't capped at whatever my coupon rate is. And I think that that's actually really been the area where it's diverge the most. How exactly did we get here? I think it was a willingness of these sponsors to come in and say, all right, I'm going to pay 16 or 17 times enterprise value to EBITDA for this business and I'm going to put in an unusually large check, let's say 40% of that I will put in in equity instead of the typical 20%. So historically people have in the LBO space, they were coming to the high yield market saying we'll put 20% down, finance the other 80% if they go to the private credit guys and say, well we'll put 40% down if you'll lend to us on the balance. We love this business at 16 times. And I think they potentially just persuaded a lot of these lenders to get a little bit too far out over their skis in terms of the amount of leverage that they were willing to extend. And as a private credit lender, if it's just you or if it's just you and one other, you can be a lot more creative in terms of structure. And I think they also took on this willingness to say, okay, well you can't afford to pay me this interest. So how about if we pick it? Because if we pick it, my investment will grow and it'll give me sort of a quasi equity like feel because it's getting bigger. So that's kind of intriguing to me too. So I think there was a little bit of lender overzealousness. I think there was a competitive pressure. I think that they, they fell prey to some of the sponsors willingness to overpay for some of these business.
Tracy Alloway
So when I hear secured credit that might not have that much security behind it, as we just discussed with the example of the software companies. And then when I hear increasing amounts of leverage on the issuer side, but also on the fun side, because you have private credit funds that use leverage to increase their returns. And then when I hear illiquidity mismatches between, you know, a publicly traded BDC and the underlying assets. All of those sound very familiar from financial crisis history and have certain, you know, negative connotations around them. How worried should we be about the future of private credit at this point and the idea that is it going to be a systemic issue for the financial system?
Craig Manchuk
I think the liability structure that we've discussed numerous times is dramatically different than what we saw in the financial crisis. So most financial institutions that fail, fail because of their liability structure. They're built to realize losses over extended periods of time, which I think many of these credit funds will be able to do. But I do think that we are going to enter into a period where we're going to see significant dispersion among credit fund managers or private credit managers. We've been lulled into uniformity of returns. Right. If you look in the public markets, it's been a huge trend towards indexation. So most people own SPY or QQQ or whatever form you want to pick. So equity returns all look very similar. And that's what happened in the early days of private credit where everything was marked at par yet 8, 9, 10% coupon, it looked great. So you couldn't really see some of the cracks below the surface. As Craig alluded to earlier, there have been managers who've been doing this for 25, 30 years and there are very new recent entrants into it who've seen substantial growth in their assets that they had to invest. So I think that's probably the first leg that we'll see is that you're going to start to see real dispersion of returns from manager to manager. But they have a good head start where they have coupons and they have returns built in that they can absorb higher default rates than they are now. It's just a question of how high do those default rates get relative to the coupons that they're earning.
John Sheehan
We've heard some numbers from, from some of the sell side Wall street analysts that suggest that we could see 15% defaults in private credit. Seems a little high, but it doesn't. It's not so far out of the realm of possibility because we've just seen the practice of extending more leverage to companies that probably shouldn't have that much leverage on many, many years ago. A good friend of mine who was doing this a long, long time told me, company gets to six times levered, it's very, very difficult to get out from under that. And this is back in the early 2000s, we were in a normal rate environment that went by the wayside when we went through this period of extraordinarily low rates for many, many years post financial crisis. But now that we're back where we are today, we're back into that environment where six, seven times leverage all of a sudden at the current borrowing rate rates becomes a real strain on most companies balance sheets. So again, if you think about the legacy businesses, some of these software companies that were in these portfolios, they might be 2020 or 2021 vintage LBOs that haven't monetized yet. They were borrowing versus A, an historically low treasury rate. Once we raised rates in 2022, all of a sudden the resets on these loans, because they are flowing floating rate, have gone up. So it's chewing into the equity value of these businesses and it's putting an increasing amount of strain on the companies to have to cover their interest expenses. So I think that all these things filter into more and more pressure on these companies, which could lead us to a spot where we do get to 15% defaults. I'm not saying that the probability is very, very high, but if it happened, I wouldn't be shocked.
Tracy Alloway
And can I just ask, you said earlier that you don't have any private credit exposure in your fund at the moment, is that right or.
John Sheehan
That's correct.
Tracy Alloway
Okay. What made you take that decision? Because you said you'd been involved a little bit earlier. And then secondly, what would you need to see in the market to potentially get back in?
John Sheehan
I think the reason that we don't is because we were financed out over time and it was never a core part of what we did. It was a more ancillary part of our, of our business. There were a few individual opportunities that came along with companies that needed money for a particular reason or it was a business that people, I don't think widely understood or it was the size of the borrowing requirement. One of the companies took the money that we lent them and kept the money on their balance sheet the whole time. They just had it as a safety net. It was less than one and a half times levered for the entire time. They no longer needed it. They paid us off and moved on and went to the next thing. So other times we were financed out by the leveraged loan market or the private credit market where they were going to be much more aggressive on the terms than the ones that we were willing to provide. And that's typically we're, we're a bunch of old guys and we have, we have our ways of doing things that have been developed over 30 or 40 years. We're not likely to change our approach to providing credit just because the market now all of a sudden wants to get more aggressive and look past some of the obvious things, particularly as it comes to structure and covenant protections and amounts of leverage. We look at the business and say, okay, this business is worth seven times. I'm not going to give them six and a half times leverage to do something like that just doesn't make sense.
Craig Manchuk
If you go back to the point you made to begin the podcast, how private credit and the proliferation of the loan market has impacted the high yield investment grade market, what was once a two tiered market of investment grade and non investment grade has really become a four tier market. Investment grade, high yield, leveraged loans, private credit credit, in that order of credit quality. Most of the credits that do not meet our underwriting standards have fallen into leverage loan and private credit. So the high yield market is substantially higher quality now than it was before. The double B portion of the market is approaching 60%. That used to be about 35%. And the riskiest segment with triple Cs is now about 9%. That used to be over 20%. So just by our underwriting process, we kick out a lot of the highly leveraged companies, kick out a lot of the companies that do not have the interest coverage that we're looking for. And so it's a function of our underwriting process, but also where the more risky companies are financing themselves these days.
Tracy Alloway
All right, well, I think we could talk about this even more, but we're going to have to leave it there. John and Craig, thank you so much much for coming on Oddball. Really appreciate it.
John Sheehan
Thanks so much. Nice being with you.
Joe Weisenthal
That was great. Thank you so much.
Tracy Alloway
So Joe, I found that conversation super helpful just to sort of again, contextualize private credit in the history of the bond market. I do think, setting aside whether or not this is like a systemic issue, and I do, I do think like we're probably not even close to 2008 style crisis. Right. Like it just can't be. But there are probably some hidden issues within there that are like going to start to appear. But setting all of that aside, I think one of the challenges of private credit having these continued crises or at least being in the headlines all the time, is it is going to have a macroeconomic impact.
Joe Weisenthal
Sure.
Tracy Alloway
If you think of it as this market that is now bigger than the junk bond market, like the junk bond market is an important source of financing for companies all around America and so is private credit. So if you start to see that particular asset class slow down like at a minimum, that's basically a credit crunch for a bunch of companies.
Joe Weisenthal
Totally. And you can see like how there's like this path dependency and again that doesn't mean it has to be like systemic but you can see how there's this path dependency where as you mentioned, you get the headlines about withdrawals. There are more withdrawals. These sponsors have to sell good assets. They might have to take on credit borrowing of their own in order to meet those redemptions and so forth. You can see how that really spirals. I just really like their situation, how well they situated the whole conversation. Situationship, their situation, the way they could situate in the history of credit. Yeah, like look like if we're talking about GE credit, financing, jet engine deals, etc. That's private credit. Yeah, we, it's expanded beyond that but it's basically all sort of versions, you know, various flavors of a kind of financing that is quite old and non exotic at all.
Tracy Alloway
Absolutely. But I do think the sequencing also matters when it comes to raising money because as they pointed out, this idea that like you're going to start a fund and you immediately have to start like going out and sourcing stuff to buy with that money and it puts pressure on you to get like what you can get.
Joe Weisenthal
That was very interesting. The difference between fund structure of a private equity fund versus a private credit fund, which I had never really thought of. Right. So VC and pe, you're like hunting around for deals and so forth and like all right, we got a deal. Then you call up all the LPs who give you commitments and say wire us that cash that you promised to now. Whereas in the financing realm, you know, you just always have the cash on hand, it's always coming in and out. And the coming in and out part also helped clarify something for me, which is that unlike with say a VC investment or a P E investment where you put the money in and it's sort of indeterminate when you get the money back.
John Sheehan
Right.
Joe Weisenthal
You don't know when the company is going to IPO, you don't know it's going to sell, etc. With lending, you do have that schedule from day one of when the money is supposed to come back in. And therefore the idea of gates and redemption schedules in the first place makes more sense because. Because when you have this sort of pre understood timing of when the money comes back in, you can understand why you have a mechanism in place to schedule and regulate when the money is allowed to go back out to the LPs, right.
Tracy Alloway
But you still need to get back to some form of normalcy. But like it's obviously incredibly helpful.
Joe Weisenthal
Well, and this gets to a thing, you know, I've wondered about, which is like, well, okay, is part of the issue here with some of these more retail oriented private credit, which is education or lack of sophistication where you have entities putting money into private credit that hadn't really appreciated that this is an element of it, which maybe.
Tracy Alloway
But on the other hand, gating itself.
Joe Weisenthal
Yeah, the gating itself. But on the other hand, like the industry wouldn't be as big as it is today were you not going out to these less sophisticated investors. So yeah, two sides of the same coin there.
Tracy Alloway
All right, shall we leave it there?
Joe Weisenthal
Let's leave it there.
Tracy Alloway
This has been another episode of the All Thoughts podcast. I'm Tracy Alloway. You can follow me at Tracy Alloway.
Joe Weisenthal
And I'm Jill Weisenthal. You can follow me at the Stalwart. Follow our producers Carmen Rodriguez at CarmenArman, Dashiell Bennett at Dashbot, Kel Brooks at Kel Brooks, Kevin Lozano at Kevin Lloyd Lozano and for more Odd Lots content go to bloomberg.com oddlaws we have a daily newsletter and all of our episodes and you can chat about all of these topics 24. 7 in our Discord, Discord, GG Oddlaws
Tracy Alloway
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This Odd Lots episode dives deep into the world of private credit—a fast-growing, sometimes opaque sector of the financial system. Hosts Joe Weisenthal and Tracy Alloway seek a nuanced view of what’s driving the private credit boom, how this market has evolved, and what risks and structural issues may lurk beneath its surface. Their guests are veteran credit and bond managers John Sheehan and Craig Manchuk of Osterweis, providing history, perspective, and candid insight.
"Something between a hiccup and a blowup...it’s very difficult to find nuanced commentary in between." — Tracy Alloway [02:29]
Pre-2008, credit investing options were simpler: "blue chip" investment grade bonds or junk/high-yield. Private credit existed but exploded post-crisis.
Evolution Timeline:
1980s: High-yield bond (“junk”) market takes off, allowing risky companies market access.
1990s-2000s: Leveraged loans and CLO market development enhance risk-sharing.
Post-2008: Regulation forces banks to restrict risky lending (e.g., leverage caps), clearing space for non-bank lenders.
Institutional Legacy: GE Capital a forerunner in private credit, seeding talent and deal structures throughout the industry ([10:24-12:16]).
Notable Quote:
"A lot of this has been around for a long time. People just forget about it because...not as many people out there that are as old as we are, that remember those guys from the '80s and '90s." — John Sheehan [11:17]
“Shadow banking” is essentially another word for private credit, especially post-2008 ([12:16]).
“By most estimates, [private credit is] bigger than the junk-rated market, which is kind of crazy...” — Tracy Alloway [16:49]
Fund Structures:
“You capped the amount of money that can exit the fund, but that doesn’t mean that you’ve stopped people from wanting to exit...you’re sort of building up that pressure.” — Tracy Alloway [32:41]
Competitive Dynamics:
"Some of the issuers... when they go to the private credit market, it's just a competition for who will jump the highest for the piece of meat..." — Craig Manchuk [23:13]
Quality Degradation:
Illiquidity Premium & Insurance Company Role:
Gates Manage Liability, Not Asset Quality:
"You are left with a fund that has raised more debt to meet some redemptions, then been forced to...sell more positions. Some of those are your better positions. So now you’ve got a more levered fund with poorer overall investment quality. Where does that stop?" — John Sheehan [34:45]
Workouts Will Be Complex:
Dispersion of Returns:
Outlook on Systemic Risk:
Notable Quote:
"If you think about the legacy businesses, some of these software companies that were in these portfolios...they were borrowing versus a historically low treasury rate. Once we raised rates, the resets...have gone up. So it’s chewing into the equity value...could lead us to a spot where we do get to 15% defaults." — John Sheehan [45:00]
The guests’ fund currently holds no private credit exposure, having been “financed out” of opportunities by more aggressive competitors; their underwriting standards did not match the risk on offer ([46:48-48:34]).
The credit spectrum has expanded (now IG, high yield, leveraged loans, and private credit), pushing riskier deals into the private credit bucket and raising average quality in high yield.
“...We're a bunch of old guys... We’re not likely to change our approach to providing credit just because the market...wants to get more aggressive and look past some of the obvious things, particularly as it comes to structure and covenant protections and amounts of leverage.” — John Sheehan [47:08]
| Segment | Start | |----------------------------------------------------------------------------------|--------| | Introduction & headlines on private credit issues | 01:54 | | Nuanced takes vs. crisis or denial in private credit | 02:29 | | Historical evolution: GE Capital, shadow banking, and leveraged finance | 08:14 | | Growth drivers: post-2008 regulatory vacuum, investor demand, expediency | 16:49 | | Sourcing competition and erosion of underwriting standards | 22:46 | | Fund structures: why gates & liquidity mismatches matter | 24:23 | | Retail inflows, redemption pressures, liability vs. asset quality | 33:49 | | New risks: lack of hard assets, SaaS/tech debt, and recovery "zeros" | 38:54 | | Systemic risk, dispersion among managers, stress test scenarios | 43:23 | | Why Osterweis is out of private credit; 4-tier market model | 46:48 |
Throughout, the conversation is thoughtful but candid, balancing history, data, and lived experience. The tone is wary but not alarmist: there are serious potential problems (especially for aggressive entrants, less sophisticated investors, and certain retail products), but systemic collapse seems unlikely due to the contractual/loss-absorbing nature of the funds' liabilities.
The next big chapter for private credit seems poised to involve a stress test—sorting strong managers from weak, and high from low-quality books. For now, caution and strong underwriting (and liquidity) are winning philosophies.