Odd Lots Podcast Summary
Episode: What's Actually Going On With Private Credit
Date: April 27, 2026
Hosts: Joe Weisenthal & Tracy Alloway
Guests: John Sheehan & Craig Manchuk (Portfolio Managers, Osterweis Strategic Income Fund)
Episode Overview
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.
Key Discussion Points & Insights
1. Why Is Private Credit in the Spotlight?
- Heightened geopolitical news (e.g., Iran) might be overshadowing the “private credit” discussion, but recent headlines about slowdowns and redemption issues have raised eyebrows.
- Views on private credit tend to be polarized: either as a minor concern (“just a few cockroaches”) or an impending systemic risk (“financial crisis 2.0”). The episode aims for nuance.
- Notable Quote:
"Something between a hiccup and a blowup...it’s very difficult to find nuanced commentary in between." — Tracy Alloway [02:29]
2. Private Credit in Historical Context
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Pre-2008, credit investing options were simpler: "blue chip" investment grade bonds or junk/high-yield. Private credit existed but exploded post-crisis.
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Evolution Timeline:
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1980s: High-yield bond (“junk”) market takes off, allowing risky companies market access.
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1990s-2000s: Leveraged loans and CLO market development enhance risk-sharing.
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Post-2008: Regulation forces banks to restrict risky lending (e.g., leverage caps), clearing space for non-bank lenders.
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Institutional Legacy: GE Capital a forerunner in private credit, seeding talent and deal structures throughout the industry ([10:24-12:16]).
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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]
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“Shadow banking” is essentially another word for private credit, especially post-2008 ([12:16]).
3. What Drove the Recent Private Credit Boom?
- Investor Side:
- After bad equity market experiences (dot-com bubble, three years of S&P declines), investors sought alternatives yielding more than public equities or low-yielding government debt ([17:28]).
- ZIRP (Zero Interest Rate Policy) and yield hunts sent massive inflows to private credit funds.
- Borrower/Issuer Side:
- Risky borrowers, limited by bank regulation, turned to private credit funds.
- Expediency and Partnership:
- LBO sponsors preferred relationships with flexible and swift private lenders ([18:51]).
- Result: Private credit market grew to rival—and surpass—the size of the junk bond market.
- Notable Quote:
“By most estimates, [private credit is] bigger than the junk-rated market, which is kind of crazy...” — Tracy Alloway [16:49]
4. Structural Features & Risks of Private Credit
5. Default, Recovery, and Systemic Risk
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Gates Manage Liability, Not Asset Quality:
- Gates can prevent sudden fund collapses but can’t protect against poor asset performance ([33:49-37:21]).
- If default rates spike, fund managers may have to sell quality assets, leaving remaining investors with riskier holdings—potentially a “doom loop.”
- Notable Quote:
"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]
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Workouts Will Be Complex:
- Many underlying businesses (e.g., SaaS) have few hard assets, raising worries about how much creditors could recover in a downturn ([37:21, 40:02-42:38]).
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Dispersion of Returns:
- After years of uniform “private credit always wins” returns, the next phase may bring wide performance variation across managers ([43:23]).
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Outlook on Systemic Risk:
- Structural differences (liability side, regulatory environment) make widespread “2008-style” contagion unlikely, but pockets of significant stress and default (up to 15% in some scenarios) are plausible ([45:00]).
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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]
6. Why the Osterweis Fund Avoids Private Credit (for Now)
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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]).
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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.
- Notable Quote:
“...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]
Timestamps for Key Segments
| 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 |
Notable Quotes
- “Something between a hiccup and a blowup...it’s very difficult to find nuanced commentary in between.” — Tracy Alloway [02:29]
- “By most estimates, [private credit is] bigger than the junk-rated market, which is kind of crazy...” — Tracy Alloway [16:49]
- "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]
- "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]
- "...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]
Tone & Takeaways
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.
Additional Context & Final Thoughts
- Private credit’s growth has remade the corporate credit landscape and is now “too big to ignore.”
- The segment’s structure, sources of risk, and investor base are different from prior cycles—policy makers, CIOs, and even journalists need more nuanced understanding to interpret future headlines.
- The panel agrees: “It just can’t be” a 2008-scale crisis, but some cracks are likely to appear. Investors should focus on manager selection, fund structure, and the risks of illiquid, opaque products—especially in a higher-rate, lower-growth world.