Private Credit Markets Theory, Evidence, and Emerging Frontiers
Jiacheng Zou
Papers from arXiv.org
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.
Date: 2026-03
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:arx:papers:2603.14491
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