The $2 trillion private credit market just received a massive reality check from the biggest bank in the world.
According to reports, JPMorgan Chase (JPM) has actively reduced the value of some loan portfolios provided to private credit funds. The catalyst? Mounting fears over deteriorating credit quality and the existential threat Artificial Intelligence poses to the historically “safe” recurring revenue models of legacy software companies.
📉 THE MARKDOWN MECHANICS: This is a surgical, sector-specific intervention by JPM:
- The Leverage Loop: JPMorgan provides massive loans to private credit funds, which those funds use as leverage to buy middle-market loans. JPM’s credit agreements allow them to re-mark valuations based on the fund’s underlying collateral if there is a market dislocation.
- The Software Threat: The bank reportedly went through its financing portfolio name-by-name and sector-by-sector, specifically applying markdowns to loans with underlying software exposure.
- The Rationale: As one source noted, it is critical to re-mark valuations when the market warrants it, rather than waiting for a systemic crisis to force your hand. At a recent leveraged finance conference, CEO Jamie Dimon explicitly stated the bank is being more prudent in lending against software assets.
⚠️ THE CONTAGION EFFECT: The market reaction was swift, hitting the public shares of the biggest private credit mega-managers:
- Ares Management dropped 4.5%, while Blue Owl, KKR, and Carlyle all slid roughly 2.6%.
- The Liquidity Squeeze: This valuation hit comes at the worst possible time. The industry is already facing a massive wave of investor withdrawals fueled by tech default fears. Just last week, BlackRock had to limit withdrawals from a flagship debt fund, while Blackstone’s massive BCRED fund disclosed a surge in Q1 redemption requests.
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: For the last decade, private credit funds have aggressively financed software buyouts, treating their sticky, subscription-based revenues as ironclad collateral. But Generative AI has fundamentally altered that math. If AI can disintermediate a software company’s product, that company loses its pricing power, and subsequently, its ability to service its massive debt loads. JPMorgan’s markdown is a blaring siren: the era of blindly applying premium leverage to any company with “SaaS” in its pitch deck is officially over.
👇 Private Credit & Risk Management Professionals: If JPMorgan is officially marking down software-backed collateral, how long until the broader $2 trillion private credit market is forced to recognize these underlying tech valuations on their own books?
