By Patturaja Murugaboopathy
June 5 (Reuters) - Private credit's rapid expansion is
losing momentum, with U.S.-focused direct lending issuance
slowing in recent months and fundraising still below its recent
peak, industry data shows.
PitchBook data indicates new loan issuance by private credit
lenders fell to $44.76 billion in the three months ended May
2026, down about 40% from $74.56 billion in the first quarter.
Issuance to private equity-backed borrowers dropped nearly
37% over the same period to $28.5 billion, while direct lending
volume tied to leveraged buyouts fell about 34% to $15.15
billion.
The decline suggests the industry is entering a more
cautious phase, as managers contend with softer fundraising,
elevated redemption requests, closer scrutiny of loan quality
and renewed competition from cheaper syndicated loan markets.
Concerns over loan quality have increased after weakness in
software debt, a sector widely held across leveraged finance and
private credit portfolios.
Data from PitchBook's Leveraged Commentary and Data unit
showed software loans in the Morningstar LSTA U.S. Leveraged
Loan Index were down 4.7% year-to-date through May 31, compared
with a 1.2% gain for the broader index.
A sustained slowdown in originations could weigh on private
credit managers' earnings by limiting asset growth and
transaction fees, particularly if funds facing redemptions
preserve cash rather than deploy into new loans.
Early second-quarter filings suggest redemption pressure has
persisted.
Blackstone and Cliffwater both capped withdrawals from
their private credit funds at 5% after redemption requests
exceeded quarterly limits, with investors seeking to redeem 10%
of Blackstone Private Credit Fund shares and 17% of Cliffwater's
$31.3 billion fund.
Broader private credit fundraising also remained subdued.
Preqin data showed investors committed $45 billion to private
credit funds in the first four months of 2026, little changed
from $44.5 billion in the same period in 2025 but below the
$52.2 billion raised in the same period in 2023.
Retail flows have also softened. Jefferies said private
wealth flows across tracked retail alternative products fell 17%
month-on-month in May, their second straight monthly decline,
with private credit flows down 35%. Private credit flows in the
second quarter to date were down 70% from the first-quarter
average, the brokerage said.