Table of Contents
Fetching ...

Private Credit Markets Theory, Evidence, and Emerging Frontiers

Jiacheng Zou

Abstract

Private credit assets under management grew from \$158 billion in 2010 to nearly \$2 trillion globally by mid-2024, fundamentally reshaping corporate credit markets. This paper provides a systematic survey of the academic literature on private credit, organizing theory and evidence around four questions: why the market has grown so rapidly, how direct lender technology differs from bank lending, what risk-adjusted returns investors earn, and whether the sector poses systemic risks. We develop an integrated theoretical framework linking delegated monitoring, soft-information processing, and incomplete contracting to the institutional specifics of modern direct lending. The empirical evidence documents a distinctive lending technology serving opaque, private-equity-sponsored borrowers at a meaningful and persistent spread premium over the broadly syndicated loan market, while performance evidence suggests that risk-adjusted returns for the average fund are largely consumed by fees.

Private Credit Markets Theory, Evidence, and Emerging Frontiers

Abstract

Private credit assets under management grew from \2 trillion globally by mid-2024, fundamentally reshaping corporate credit markets. This paper provides a systematic survey of the academic literature on private credit, organizing theory and evidence around four questions: why the market has grown so rapidly, how direct lender technology differs from bank lending, what risk-adjusted returns investors earn, and whether the sector poses systemic risks. We develop an integrated theoretical framework linking delegated monitoring, soft-information processing, and incomplete contracting to the institutional specifics of modern direct lending. The empirical evidence documents a distinctive lending technology serving opaque, private-equity-sponsored borrowers at a meaningful and persistent spread premium over the broadly syndicated loan market, while performance evidence suggests that risk-adjusted returns for the average fund are largely consumed by fees.
Paper Structure (20 sections, 2 tables)