European Private Credit Still Benefits From Structural Scarcity

Terug

Morgan Stanley argues that despite rising skepticism, European private credit continues to retain its “all-weather” characteristics due to persistent financing gaps, constrained bank lending, and resilient illiquidity premiums. 

  • European private equity dry powder (~$292bn) remains roughly three times larger than direct-lending dry powder (~$97bn), sustaining long-term demand for private financing.
  • Direct lending’s share of European middle-market buyout financing has surged from under 5% in 2014 to ~58% in 2025, while still remaining below U.S. penetration levels.
  • Morgan Stanley argues recent stress cases like First Brands are being misclassified as private credit problems, despite primarily involving syndicated and asset-backed structures rather than sponsor-backed direct lending.

The broader debate may now shift from whether private credit survives higher rates — to whether Europe is still in the early innings of structural private-credit expansion.

Registreer of log in om verder te lezen. Investment Officer is een onafhankelijk journalistiek platform voor professionals werkzaam in de Belgische beleggingsindustrie. 

Een abonnement is GRATIS voor professionals die werkzaam zijn bij banken en onafhankelijke vermogensbeheerders.