By: Russ Kamp, CEO, Ryan ALM, Inc.
I started raising alarm bells related to DB pension exposure to alternatives – mainly private equity and private credit several years ago, and have produced roughly a dozen blog posts that touch on this issue. You may recall some of the posts from 2024:
Good Ideas are Often Overwhelmed!
Well, unfortunately it appears that it is time to pay the piper! As mentioned in the posts listed above, we as an industry don’t truly appreciate the idea that there is a natural capacity to EVERY investment. As an industry, we DO overwhelm good ideas and those funds that are late to the party are often left with just the crumbs in the chaffing dish.
I stumbled over a good, but scary, list of recent events within private credit. The list was compiled by Ignacio Ramirez Moreno, Host of The Blunt Dollar Podcast:
Cliffwater saw 14% redemption requests.
Morgan Stanley’s fund got 10.9%.
Blackstone hit a record 7.9%.
All three capped withdrawals below what investors requested.
Glendon Capital flagged concerns about Blue Owl’s valuations.
Pimco called it “a crisis of really bad underwriting.”
JPMorgan’s marking down loans and tightening lending to private credit funds.
Partners Group thinks defaults could double.
Pimco’s predicting a “full-blown default cycle.”
Apollo’s saying the pain could last 12-18 months.
Well, that is some list! In addition, I was always quite skeptical of the credit quality that was assigned to these companies, and I guess that I wasn’t too far off given that 43% of private credit borrowers have negative free cash flow. Furthermore, the U.S./Israel vs. Iran war won’t help either, as inflation expectations have ratcheted higher reducing significantly the prospects for Fed action leading to lower rates. In fact, it would not be surprising to see the Fed have to raise rates. If such an action occurs, the higher interest rates could exacerbate the current challenging environment for private debt borrowers and their income statements.
Let’s see how the pension plan sponsor community and their advisors deal with private credit’s first real crisis. It should be both interesting and likely painful.