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For private credit borrowers, big maturity walls are further out

By Thomson Reuters May 1, 2026 | 9:02 AM

By Patturaja Murugaboopathy

May 1 (Reuters) – For most companies that have borrowed from U.S. private credit funds, the real moment of reckoning – when their loans mature and they need to refinance cheap debt taken ​during the COVID-19 pandemic years – is a couple of years ‌away.

A Reuters analysis of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filings from 74 private credit funds, also known as business development companies (BDCs), found only about $15 billion of a total $84 billion of their assets mature this year, with the bulk of loan maturities peaking ‌in ​2028 and 2029.

The data allays some fears in ⁠the private banking sector facing ⁠strains from higher interest rates, weaker earnings growth and pressure on profitability in the software sector.

Shares of BDCs, which are private investment funds that lend directly to many mid-sized borrowers, have been under pressure ​and faced redemptions due to these concerns.

Lotfi Karoui, multi-asset credit strategist at bond fund manager PIMCO, said in a note the amount of ⁠upcoming debt due for refinancing for software ⁠borrowers in the leveraged loan and direct lending markets also ​appeared modest.

“The good news is that relatively benign near-term refinancing needs for ​software companies limit the risk of an abrupt rise in financial ‌distress,” he said in a recent note.

Credit quality in BDC loan portfolios is weakening, with non-accruals rising and payment-in-kind income increasing in parts of the sector, according to a Fitch Ratings report.

Companies with loans maturing this year ⁠could face refinancing pressure, forcing them to seek more amend-and-extend transactions, which push out repayment dates by changing loan terms, as well as repricings and ⁠other liability-management exercises.

Software and ‌technology borrowers are among those drawing scrutiny from investors, ⁠given slower growth and concerns about AI disruption.

The risks ​could ‌be amplified for loans overlapping BDC portfolios, since stress ​at any ⁠one borrower with multiple creditors could pressure loan valuations and net asset value (NAV) across the sector.

For BDCs whose shares are already trading at a discount to NAV, that could make it harder to raise equity without diluting shareholders’ interest and could increase their cost of capital.

(Reporting By Patturaja Murugaboopathy;Editing by Vidya Ranganathan ​and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)