While the broader private credit market faces scrutiny over liquidity and transparency, AIG’s leadership provided specific data to prove their exposure is negligible.
Total Direct Lending: $1.2 billion, representing less than 1.5% of the general insurance investment portfolio.
Granularity: The portfolio consists of “middle market” loans with an average size of just $6 million, minimizing the impact of any single borrower default.
The Software Hedge: A major pain point in 2026 has been exposure to software companies threatened by AI disruption. AIG’s exposure is only $130 million (just 16 basis points of the total portfolio).
⚠️ The Industry Context: BDCs and NAV Skepticism
AIG’s proactive transparency addresses a growing “trust gap” in the private credit market, specifically regarding Business Development Companies (BDCs).
The Valuation Lag: Unlike stocks traded on an exchange, BDC assets are valued using internal “fair-value” models. Investors are increasingly skeptical that these reported Net Asset Values (NAVs) accurately reflect the current economic strain, fearing that internal models are lagging behind the real-world rise in default rates.
Scrutiny on Liquidity: As redemptions pick up across the industry, big asset managers are under the microscope. By slowing down deployment now, AIG is prioritizing liquidity over yield, a move that the market rewarded with a 5% share price boost.
📈 Profit Drivers Beyond Credit
AIG’s stock was further bolstered by strong fundamentals in its core insurance business:
Strong Underwriting: Quarterly adjusted profit rose sharply due to disciplined policy pricing.
Catastrophe Recovery: The company saw a steep decline in claims compared to the previous year, which was dominated by the catastrophic Los Angeles wildfires.
Year-to-Date Context: Despite the 5% jump, AIG shares are still down nearly 13% YTD, reflecting the broader volatility in the financial sector throughout early 2026.
💡 The Bottom Line
AIG is choosing discipline over expansion. While peers like MetLife suggest the private credit sector has “cracks” but isn’t a bubble, AIG isn’t taking any chances. By keeping its private credit and software exposure to a minimum, AIG has signaled to Wall Street that it is a “safe harbor” in a market currently obsessed with the risks of non-transparent, AI-vulnerable lending.
