Private credit has moved rapidly from being an asset class in the ascendancy to one under intense scrutiny, but treating it as a single, homogeneous risk bucket is a mistake, according to Gravis. Philip Kent, CEO at Gravis, has shared his insights.
Goldman Sachs recently estimated the private credit market at around $3 trillion today, with forecasts suggesting it could reach approximately $4.5 trillion by 2030. At the same time, headlines have highlighted gated semi-liquid funds, a handful of highโprofile corporate failures and concerns over nonโbank underwriting standards, raising questions about the resilience of the asset class.
Philip Kent, CEO at Gravis, said:
โRecent events have understandably unsettled investors, particularly where openโended vehicles have promised more liquidity than their assets can deliver. But that doesnโt mean private credit has failed as an asset class. It means three fundamentals matter more than ever: knowing exactly which part of private credit you own, recognising the structural protections debt offers versus equity, and making sure fund liquidity is genuinely aligned with the underlying assets.โ
Understanding what sits beneath
โRisk in private credit ultimately comes down to what you are lending against: the loans, the borrowers and the collateral,โ Kent continued. โDirect lending to operating companies, real estate debt and infrastructure debt all behave very differently through the cycle, and they should not be lumped together.โ
While a small number of recent highโprofile cases have pointed to fraud as a driver of distress and low recoveries, Kent warns against broadโbrush conclusions. โFraud is, by definition, designed to evade underwriting processes, and both bank and nonโbank lenders have been caught out,โ he said. โThat does not equate to a systemic failure of private credit as a financing channel.โ
Matching fund and asset liquidity
A central lesson from recent gating events is the importance of aligning fundโlevel liquidity with the liquidity of the underlying assets. โPrivate credit is inherently illiquid,โ said Kent. โLoans are often bespoke, with complex documentation and limited secondary markets.โ
Semiโliquid funds have typically gated because redemption requests exceeded available cash and liquid assets, forcing managers to protect remaining investors. The risk is that, in such structures, fundโlevel liquidity demands can drive fireโsale disposals of fundamentally sound loans, crystallising losses that do not reflect underlying credit impairment.
โIn our view, semiโliquid structures are better suited to institutional investors who redeem less frequently and understand that liquidity is an option,โ Kent said. โAs retail allocations into these vehicles have grown, so has the potential for a damaging liquidity mismatch.โ
Kent argues that closedโended structures are inherently better aligned with the illiquid nature of most private credit assets. โIn these vehicles, investors can buy and sell shares on the stock market without affecting the pool of capital available to the manager.โ
Raising the bar on disclosure and transparency
Looking ahead, Kent believes the industry must do more to improve both understanding and perception of private credit among asset allocators, regulators and endโinvestors. โBetter disclosure is essential,โ he said. โInvestors need clear, consistent information on the underlying companies or assets. Private market valuations should be frequent, transparent and subject to robust independent oversight, so stakeholders can have confidence that reported numbers reflect underlying reality.โ
Kent highlighted the role of enhanced reporting and portfolioโmonitoring tools, such as Gravisโs proprietary Carapace system, in driving that transparency. โTools like Carapace can help investors see the detail that sits beneath their allocations,โ he said. โThat level of insight is becoming a minimum expectation, not a niceโtoโhave.โ
A selective, structural approach
Kent concluded: โPrivate credit is not going away; if anything, it is becoming an increasingly important part of how realโworld assets and businesses are financed. The challenge for allocators is to be highly selective, to insist on strong structural protections, and to ensure that fund liquidity and asset liquidity are properly matched. Done in that way, we believe private credit can continue to offer a resilient, defensive diversifier in portfolios.โ





