Private Credit Marketโข Braces for โTurbulence: Lenders Tighten Terms โคAmid Rising โคDistress Signals
NEW โYORK – Private credit โขlenders are increasingly embedding stricter โterms into loan agreements, signaling a growing anxiety โขabout potential future economic headwinds, according to data analyzed by Noetica. The shift reflects a โฃquite preparation for possible borrower distress, experts say, as subtle cracks beginโฃ to appear in the once-booming private debt market.
Noetica CEO Dan wertman told Fortune that the data clearly โขindicates lenders are bolstering protections within new credit deals. “What the data supports โฃis that โlenders are quietly preparing for some distress on theโข horizon, and we see that in the dataโ with the increasing โstructural protections existing in new credit deals,” he said. “Personally,โข Iโข would interpret that as lenders are anxiousโค about the future of these credit markets, and that’sโข beingโ reflected in the โterms.”
One key change isโค the proliferation of what’s being called “anti-Petsmart” language.This stems from a 2018 incident where โPetsmart, after acquiring chewy forโ $3 billion, moved a portion ofโ its Chewy stake to a subsidiary outside the reach of its lenders – a move that angered creditors. Noetica data shows โthe inclusion of this protective clause has jumped dramatically: from just โ4% โขof private credit deals in 2023 to 28% in Q3 2025.
Further tightening is evidentโฃ in lienโ subordination protection, which prevents companiesโ from taking on new debt orโ prioritizing newer creditors over existing ones without unanimous consent. This protection nowโค appears in โ84% of deals, a significantโ increase from 42% โlast year.
Leverage ratios – the amount of debt lenders provide relative โto a company’s earnings (EBITDA) – are also declining, โคindicating โa more cautiousโฃ lending โฃapproach.
However, the trend โคisn’t entirely restrictive. Lenders are concurrently offering borrowers more adaptability in areas like investments, dividend payments, andโ EBITDA โขcalculations, according to Noetica’s analysis of thousands of private credit contracts.
wertman emphasized that these changes are intentional. โค”Terms never moveโ by accident,” he stated.โ “These are refined parties with highly sophisticated data sets and thought processes behind these deals. So I wouldn’t think about it as an accident.โค I โคwould think about it asโ this is reflecting what lenders and borrowers are currently thinking of the market.”
These developments come as early warning signs emerge within the private credit landscape. Fortune previously reported a rise in covenant defaults – technical breaches of loanโ terms – from 2.2% in 2024 to 3.5% โcurrently, based on data from Lincoln International.Payment-in-kind (PIK) deals,โฃ where โคcompanies defer interest payments, have also increased, climbing from 6.5% of deals in Q4 2021 to 11% today.
Kroll Bond Rating Agency estimates that private debt defaults will peak at 5%, based on its analysis of $1 trillion in debt โขacross 2,400 companies.
While the overallโค outlook remains uncertain,โฃ the tightening of terms suggests lenders โare proactively positioning themselves for โฃa perhaps more challenging surroundingsโข in the private creditโค market.