direct lending continues to 46% 41% 13% 52% 40% 8%

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DIRECT LENDING CONTINUES TO ATTRACT YIELD STARVED INVESTORS North American-focused private direct lending funds secured a combined $17 billion in commitments in 2015, contributing to a 144% rise in aggregate capital raised for the strategy from 2012-2015.1 The popularity of direct lending, an important component of the private debt market, looks set to continue, with 46% of investors intending to commit more money to private credit this year than in 2015, and 52% of investors planning to increase their private debt allocations in the longer term (Figures 1 and 2).2 SIGNIFICANT SUPPLY-DEMAND IMBALANCE The surge of interest in direct lending may give rise to concerns that the opportunity is becoming saturated, as investors have

FIGURE 1

INVESTORS’ EXPECTED CAPITAL COMMITMENT TO PRIVATE DEBT FUNDS IN 2016 COMPARED TO 2015

directed $51.4 billion into North American-focused direct lending funds over the past three years.3 However, the supply-demand imbalance remains significant, favoring experienced lenders. As of

MORE CAPITAL IN 2016 THAN 2015

the end of 2015, North American-focused private equity buyout

46%

firms held approximately $276 billion in dry powder.4 Assuming an average equity contribution of 40% per deal, the market is facing over $400 billion in loan demand from private equity sponsors.

SAME AMOUNT OF CAPITAL IN 2016 AS IN 2015

Combined with approximately $800 billion in looming leveraged loan market maturities through 2022, the overall demand for debt

41%

financing in North America over the next five to seven years is about $1.2 trillion.5 This large financing gap does not assume any LESS CAPITAL IN 2016 THAN 2015

growth in the underlying corporate market, or take into account any further decreases in the proportion of senior debt capital supplied by banks, which have been retrenching from the middle

13%

Source: 2016 Preqin Global Private Debt Report

market due to regulatory changes.

SO WHAT EXACTLY IS DIRECT LENDING? Direct lending is the provision of debt financing on a private basis directly between a non-bank lender and the borrowing company.

FIGURE 2

INVESTORS’ INTENTIONS FOR THEIR PRIVATE DEBT ALLOCATIONS IN THE LONGER TERM

This type of lending is distinct from the traditional sources of debt capital for corporate borrowers, namely bank loans and syndicated public debt. Like syndicated leveraged loans (but unlike most high yield bonds), these private loans feature floating interest

INCREASE ALLOCATION

rates, positioning investors to benefit from any rise in rates while

52%

mitigating duration risk (the likelihood that rising interest rates will push security prices down). Two tailwinds have been building for direct lending since 2009: (i)

MAINTAIN ALLOCATION

record low interest rates and (ii) the increasing regulation of banks. The former catalyzed a global search for yield, while the latter created a financing gap in several sectors, allowing non-bank lenders to jump in. Facing a persistent low rate environment, investors seeking

DECREASE ALLOCATION

40% 8%

to meet their historical return targets have had two options: take on more risk by moving down in credit quality to achieve higher yields, or look beyond traditional fixed income to newer strategies and trade some liquidity for high quality private credits.

Source: 2016 Preqin Global Private Debt Report

borrowers with assurance that their financing will close at the

CREDIT RISK IN THE PUBLIC MARKETS Given the increased level of poor underwriting over the past several years, moving down the credit curve in high yield or otherwise is a high

negotiated yield, which is appealing in today’s volatile markets, direct lenders can often command a premium for their loans.

risk approach. The high yield bond default rate stood at 3.8% at

In addition, banks have increasingly been unwilling to underwrite

the end of the first quarter, and is widely expected to accelerate.6

second lien debt at competitive rates, or even at all. By contrast,

In addition to an increase in defaults, downgrade rating actions by

direct lenders have the flexibility to provide “unitranche” financing,

S&P have increased dramatically in recent quarters, reaching a

a single loan combining both a first lien tranche and a second lien,

negative net 164 downgrades in the first quarter, indicating a

or subordinated, tranche of debt (Figure 4). Unitranche loans are

significant drop in credit quality as perceived by S&P.7 Elevated

generally senior secured and can be viewed as providing both

levels of high yield and covenant-lite issuance in recent years,

senior collateral protection as well as junior capital economics.

shown in Figure 3, suggest that low quality debt has already found its way into many portfolios.

FIGURE 4

FIGURE 3

EQUITY Leverage: 4.0x - 8.0x LTV: 50 - 100% Market Return Range: 15% +

COVENANT-LITE VOLUME AS A PERCENT OF TOTAL VOLUME COVENANT-LITE VOLUMEINSTITUTIONAL AS A PERCENT OF TOTAL INSTITUTIONAL VOLUME

(1)

EQUITY

80% 70% 60%

40%

SUBORDINATED LOAN

30% 20% 10% 0%

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

Source: S&P LCD US Interactive Volume Report

SENIOR LOAN

THE APPEAL OF PRIVATE DIRECT LENDING

UNITRANCHE LOAN

50%

JUNIOR DEBT Leverage: 5.0x - 7.0x LTV: 50 - 70% Market Return Range: 8 - 12% + SENIOR DEBT Leverage: 2.5x - 4.5x LTV: < 50% Market Return Range: 5 - 10%

In this environment, private direct lending has emerged as an attractive alternative. A key demand source for this type of financing

UNITRANCHE DEBT Leverage 5.0x - 7.0x LTV 60% - 80% Market Return Range 7 - 12% +

Return profiles for illustrative purposes only.

has been the middle market, a sector traditionally served by banks and too small for syndicated buyers. To provide a sense of the

In addition to the lien priority offered by senior secured and

scale of this opportunity, it is important to point out that the U.S.

unitranche loans, direct lenders typically insist on strong structural

middle market generates $10+ trillion in annual revenue, accounts for

protections in their credit agreements, including both maintenance

a third of U.S. jobs across roughly 200,000 companies and, if

and incurrence covenants. As “buy and hold” investors, direct lenders

measured as a country, would represent the third largest economy

perform their own due diligence on the borrowing company, which

in the world.8 While the middle market segment is large and healthy,

can often take six to eight weeks, and draft their own loan

experiencing a 9% year-over-year increase in revenues and a 5%

agreements, in contrast to syndicated buyers who rely largely on

increase in earnings through Q1 2016, most investors have little or

materials provided by the borrower’s underwriter and are often

no exposure to this vast market.9

“term takers” – meaning they have little ability to negotiate terms or covenants.

Private middle market loans can help investors address the fixed income conundrum, as they may carry premium yields to high yield

A combination of floating rate yields and the downside protection

bonds and large, syndicated leveraged loans. This yield premium is

offered by capital structure seniority, thorough due diligence,

effectively an illiquidity premium, as investors require incremental

covenant protection and ongoing direct monitoring of company

return to compensate for the non-tradable nature of private loans.

performance, has made private direct lending an increasingly

Direct lenders do not compete only on price, but some can also

popular strategy. Investors seeking yield without compromising on

offer certainty of close and can serve as key, long-term credit

credit quality, or even simple diversification from the large corporate

providers to companies and private equity firms, effectively

issue market, should consider allocating to middle market direct

replacing the role that traditional banks used to play. By providing

credits as part of their overall fixed income strategy.

END NOTES Preqin Press Release, May 5, 2016, Europe-Focused Direct Lending Fundraising Exceeds North America in 2015. Preqin 2016 Global Private Debt Report, May 2016. 3 Preqin 2016 Global Private Debt Report, May 2016. 4 Preqin, as of December 31, 2015; overall global buyout dry powder of $460bn, approximately 60% of which is North America focused. 5 Leveraged loan market maturities S&P LCD as of August 31, 2015. 6 Forbes, S&P Global: US High Yield Default Rate Expected to Hit 5.3% by March 2017, May 10, 2016, http://www.forbes.com/sites/spleverage/2016/05/10/sp-us-high-yield-default-rateexpected-to-hit-5-3-by-march-2017/#4ac9f7cd35d6. 7 S&P Ratings Direct. 8 National Center for the Middle Market: http://www.middlemarketcenter.org/infographics/2q-2016-middle-market-indicator-infographic 9 As measured by the Golub Altman Index, which tracks median revenue and earnings growth of more than 150 privately owned companies in the Golub Capital loan portfolio. Earnings defined as EBITDA. 1

2

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