Few areas of global markets attract as much attention — or as much confusion — as private credit. While recent headlines have raised questions around risk, liquidity and underwriting discipline, they risk obscuring where opportunities genuinely exist.
For institutional investors across the GCC, this debate is particularly relevant. As portfolios continue to rebalance away from public equities and traditional fixed income toward diversifying, income‑generating strategies, private credit has emerged as a core consideration alongside sukuk and other alternatives. The key question is not whether to allocate, but where and how.
Separating headlines from fundamentals
Media scrutiny has largely focused on segments of the market that sit adjacent to — but are not representative of — traditional direct lending. In particular, broadly syndicated loans (BSLs) that are underwritten to distribute rather than to hold, have dominated negative coverage. These structures often prioritise volume and transaction fee generation over long‑term lender alignment. Further, larger private credit managers have raised significant amounts of capital, which has led them to ease underwriting, documentation, leverage, and business quality standards to deploy the large amounts of capital raised.
That distinction matters. Direct lending is not a monolithic asset class. Underwriting standards, covenant protections and alignment with investors vary significantly between managers and market segments. Specifically, lower and core middle market offers a less competitive segment of the market with the potential for outsized risk-adjusted returns. For allocators, treating private credit as a single exposure risks conflating fundamentally different investment profiles.
For disciplined managers operating in the lower and core middle market, the current environment has actually improved opportunity sets rather than weakened them.
What ‘defensive growth’ looks like in practice
At its core, direct lending involves providing financing to essential, cash‑generative businesses — often privately owned and locally focused. These companies operate in sectors such as healthcare services, inspection and testing, environmental services and replacement and repair networks: businesses that tend to demonstrate stable demand across economic cycles and are utilized in our everyday lives.
In the United States alone, nearly 200,000 middle‑market companies make up a meaningful share of economic activity. Many are less exposed to global trade or geopolitical shocks than large multinationals — a feature that resonates with GCC investors increasingly focused on resilience and downside protection, not just headline yield.
This grounded exposure challenges the notion that private credit is inherently opaque or overly complex. In reality, it relies on familiar fundamentals: providing conservative financing structures to businesses with durable cash flows and quality management.
Liquidity risk is a structure issue — not a credit one
Some recent debate has rightly focused on liquidity features in certain private credit vehicles, as well as concentrated exposure to high‑growth sectors such as software. These are legitimate considerations. However, they are structural choices, not evidence of systemic deterioration in borrower quality.
For GCC institutions — many of which can invest with longer time horizons — the lesson is not to avoid private credit, but to be deliberate about vehicle design, manager discipline and sector balance.
Where GCC investors are leaning in
Investor conversations across the region increasingly center on thoughtful portfolio construction. Rather than viewing private credit opportunistically, allocators are integrating it as a strategic sleeve aimed at:
Generating stable, contracted returns
Reducing volatility relative to public credit
Enhancing diversification without sacrificing capital protection
In this context, Shariah‑compliant direct lending structures, embedded at the underlying asset and loan level rather than applied as an overlay, are expanding the opportunity set and reinforcing alignment with shariah investment principles. This structural authenticity continues to resonate strongly with regional capital, as evidenced by sustained and growing allocations from GCC investors to these Shariah‑compliant direct lending strategies.
Selectivity will define outcomes
Looking ahead, demand for private credit remains well supported. Borrowers and private equity sponsors continue to seek alternatives to constrained bank lending, while institutional demand for income remains robust.
However, future returns will hinge less on market beta and more on manager discipline. Rigorous underwriting processes, meaningful covenants, conservative leverage and genuine alignment of interest will distinguish long‑term outperformers from the broader field.
For GCC investors, private credit offers an opportunity to capture an illiquidity and inefficiency premium with potentially lower volatility than public markets — but only when approached thoughtfully and conservatively. In a market noisy with generalisations, selectivity — not scepticism — may be the most effective strategy.
Few areas of global markets attract as much attention — or as much confusion — as private credit. While recent headlines have raised questions around risk, liquidity and underwriting discipline, they risk obscuring where opportunities genuinely exist.
For institutional investors across the GCC, this debate is particularly relevant. As portfolios continue to rebalance away from public equities and traditional fixed income toward diversifying, income‑generating strategies, private credit has emerged as a core consideration alongside sukuk and other alternatives. The key question is not whether to allocate, but where and how.
Separating headlines from fundamentals
Media scrutiny has largely focused on segments of the market that sit adjacent to — but are not representative of — traditional direct lending. In particular, broadly syndicated loans (BSLs) that are underwritten to distribute rather than to hold, have dominated negative coverage. These structures often prioritise volume and transaction fee generation over long‑term lender alignment. Further, larger private credit managers have raised significant amounts of capital, which has led them to ease underwriting, documentation, leverage, and business quality standards to deploy the large amounts of capital raised.
That distinction matters. Direct lending is not a monolithic asset class. Underwriting standards, covenant protections and alignment with investors vary significantly between managers and market segments. Specifically, lower and core middle market offers a less competitive segment of the market with the potential for outsized risk-adjusted returns. For allocators, treating private credit as a single exposure risks conflating fundamentally different investment profiles.
For disciplined managers operating in the lower and core middle market, the current environment has actually improved opportunity sets rather than weakened them.
What ‘defensive growth’ looks like in practice
At its core, direct lending involves providing financing to essential, cash‑generative businesses — often privately owned and locally focused. These companies operate in sectors such as healthcare services, inspection and testing, environmental services and replacement and repair networks: businesses that tend to demonstrate stable demand across economic cycles and are utilized in our everyday lives.
In the United States alone, nearly 200,000 middle‑market companies make up a meaningful share of economic activity. Many are less exposed to global trade or geopolitical shocks than large multinationals — a feature that resonates with GCC investors increasingly focused on resilience and downside protection, not just headline yield.
This grounded exposure challenges the notion that private credit is inherently opaque or overly complex. In reality, it relies on familiar fundamentals: providing conservative financing structures to businesses with durable cash flows and quality management.
Liquidity risk is a structure issue — not a credit one
Some recent debate has rightly focused on liquidity features in certain private credit vehicles, as well as concentrated exposure to high‑growth sectors such as software. These are legitimate considerations. However, they are structural choices, not evidence of systemic deterioration in borrower quality.
For GCC institutions — many of which can invest with longer time horizons — the lesson is not to avoid private credit, but to be deliberate about vehicle design, manager discipline and sector balance.
Where GCC investors are leaning in
Investor conversations across the region increasingly center on thoughtful portfolio construction. Rather than viewing private credit opportunistically, allocators are integrating it as a strategic sleeve aimed at:
Generating stable, contracted returns
Reducing volatility relative to public credit
Enhancing diversification without sacrificing capital protection
In this context, Shariah‑compliant direct lending structures, embedded at the underlying asset and loan level rather than applied as an overlay, are expanding the opportunity set and reinforcing alignment with shariah investment principles. This structural authenticity continues to resonate strongly with regional capital, as evidenced by sustained and growing allocations from GCC investors to these Shariah‑compliant direct lending strategies.
Selectivity will define outcomes
Looking ahead, demand for private credit remains well supported. Borrowers and private equity sponsors continue to seek alternatives to constrained bank lending, while institutional demand for income remains robust.
However, future returns will hinge less on market beta and more on manager discipline. Rigorous underwriting processes, meaningful covenants, conservative leverage and genuine alignment of interest will distinguish long‑term outperformers from the broader field.
For GCC investors, private credit offers an opportunity to capture an illiquidity and inefficiency premium with potentially lower volatility than public markets — but only when approached thoughtfully and conservatively. In a market noisy with generalisations, selectivity — not scepticism — may be the most effective strategy.
