Back in January, the dominant narrative in private credit was that negative headlines pointed to isolated events and a normalisation of flows, not systemic credit stress. Today, the picture is evolving.
How private credit breaks
The consensus view of private credit risk begins with this observation: credit sits above equity in the capital structure. For a loan to be impaired, the equity cushion must first be eroded, and that erosion must originate from deteriorating fundamentals, margins and cash flows at the enterprise level. Under this framework, private credit cannot implode in isolation. It can only break if equity breaks first. This is mostly correct, but in the context of private credit, there are some nuances that must be explained.
This framework is incomplete. It describes one transmission channel while ignoring three others that may be equally capable of transmitting stress through the private credit system in the current cycle.
In this UBP Headlines, we identify four structural fault lines through which private credit can experience impairment, each representing a fundamentally different risk layer:
| Fault line | Risk layer | Core mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| The Phantom Cushion | Valuation Risk | Model-based equity valuations disguise breached attachment points |
| Sponsor Optionality | Sponsor Behaviour Risk | Private Equity (PE) sponsors exercise a put option on portfolio companies, creating discontinuous impairment |
| Rate-Driven Impairment | Macro Mechanical Risk |
Floating-rate debt erodes coverage ratios independently of enterprise fundamentals |
| Vehicle Feedback Loops | Market-Structure Risk | Business Development Companies (BDC) equity sell-offs constrain lending capacity and generate endogenous credit stress |
Only the first of these follows the conventional equity-first pathway. The other three exploit structural features unique to today’s private credit ecosystem: opaque marks, sponsor optionality, floating-rate mechanics without borrower protection, and vehicle-level feedback loops driven by regulatory leverage constraints.
Download our UBP Headlines
The opinions expressed herein are correct as at 20 March 2026 and are subject to change without notice. Any forecast, projection or target, where provided, is indicative only and is not guaranteed in any way.
