The $3.5 trillion private credit market is facing its sharpest scrutiny in years. New Q1 2026 filings from major Business Development Companies (BDCs) reveal a significant downward shift in portfolio valuations, as the industry grapples with the dual pressures of high interest rates and technology-driven disruption.
Deep Discounts and Falling Ratios A review of 14 major BDCs shows the aggregate fair value-to-cost ratio fell to 98.55% in March. This represents a total discount of approximately $1.2 billion below amortized cost across the sector. The decline was widespread among industry leaders. For instance, CION Investment Corp saw its ratio drop 176 basis points to 91.59%, while Ares Capital Corp ($ARCC), Blackstone Secured Lending ($BXSL), and Goldman Sachs BDC ($GSBD) all reported declines ranging from 119 to 131 basis points.
The AI Disruption Factor For the first time, funds are explicitly citing Artificial Intelligence as a primary risk to borrower stability. AI is rapidly upending traditional business models, making long-term revenue projections for mid-sized corporate borrowers increasingly unpredictable. At Goldman Sachs BDC, non-accrual loans—where interest is no longer being paid—jumped to 4.7%, a sharp increase from 2.8% in the previous quarter.
Strategic Bailouts and Investor Anxiety The mounting stress has prompted Moody’s to shift its outlook for the BDC sector to negative. In a move to stabilize its brand, KKR has stepped in with a $300 million support package for FS KKR Capital following heavy losses and a sharp decline in Net Asset Value (NAV). Meanwhile, redemptions at non-traded BDCs have climbed to 3.8%, signaling that some investors are pulling capital as the “higher-for-longer” rate environment persists.
A Warning on Deep Distress Data from MSCI further underscores the crisis, showing that over 10% of private credit loans globally have now been marked down by at least 50%. Analysts warn that loans valued at less than 50 cents on the dollar are typically in “deep distress,” indicating a high probability of restructuring or default.
The Investor Takeaway: Private credit is no longer the “unshakeable” asset class of the early 2020s. As the gap between strong and weak borrowers widens, the focus is shifting from yield generation to asset recovery. For BDC investors, the critical metric to watch is no longer just the dividend yield, but NAV stability and the percentage of non-accrual loans in the portfolio.
