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Software Recurring Revenue Lending: Flexibility and Skill Required

09 May 2025
5 min read
Jay Ramakrishnan| Senior Managing Director, Head of Originations and Founding Member—AB Private Credit Investors
Shishir Agrawal| Senior Managing Director and Founding Member—AB Private Credit Investors

It may seem risky to lend against recurring revenues, not earnings. With proper underwriting, it doesn’t have to be.

Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) has done wonders for corporate efficiency and agility—and for the fast-growing software companies that deliver it. Steady buyout interest from private equity sponsors creates what we see as attractive opportunities for private lenders to finance acquisitions. But to avoid pitfalls, lenders must use the right tools to tap into the sector.

SaaS companies stand out because they can deliver the enterprise resource planning, security, infrastructure and workflow solutions that companies rely on for essential operations. These include supply chain procurement, resource planning, accounting and customer relationship management, to name just a few.

In our view, the “mission-critical” nature of the service has the potential to generate visible, high-quality revenue streams. Contracts are usually annual with automatic renewals, and companies charge customers a fixed monthly fee. What’s more, customers tend to be sticky: retention rates of 90% or higher are common.

Financing for private equity buyouts of these businesses comes mostly from private credit investors. It’s usually via annual recurring-revenue (ARR) loans, with loan amounts set at a multiple of annualized recurring revenue. For example, a software company with recurring revenues of $100 million seeking a loan of twice that amount would borrow $200 million.

Standard Financials Don’t Tell the True Story  

Recently, a handful of software loans structured this way have struggled, leading some market participants to consider them riskier than traditional private loans.

We don’t see it that way. It’s natural for default rates to tick up as an industry grows and matures. And a challenging economic environment over the last two years has slowed IT spending and the growth trajectory of some software companies, causing sector default rates to rise in recent quarters.

But historical default rates for software debt, including ARR loans, have been low. On average, they’ve been lower than those in many other sectors since interest rates began rising sharply in 2022 (Display). 

Average Software Default Rates Remain Low
Percent
Bar chart shows default rates by quarter in five industries; average default rates for sofware the lowest at 1%.

As of March 31, 2025
Source: Proskauer

What’s more, accounting rules don’t reflect the inherent profitability of a software company investing in growth—even when its recurring revenue is consistently strong. It’s not unusual for software firms to reinvest most of their revenue to drive growth and boost market share, with annual growth targets reaching as high as 20%–40%.

Under the Hood: Revenue Quality and Customer Value

It takes specialized knowledge and experience for lenders to assess the underlying quality of recurring revenues as well as the cost to acquire customers, and their expected lifetime values.

For example, consider a software provider with a 90% customer retention rate. When it acquires a new customer, it’s effectively gaining an asset that will generate revenue, on average, for a decade or more. But this asset can’t be capitalized under accounting rules, so the company books only a small fraction of the expected lifetime revenues each month.

The majority of costs, meanwhile, are largely tied to acquiring new customers or developing new products—key growth drivers—and must be expensed in financials when they’re incurred. This creates a mismatch between costs and long-term revenues that often leaves fast-growing software businesses reporting marginal or negative cash flow.

As we see it, many of these companies would be capable of generating positive cash flow if they were to reduce discretionary growth–oriented spending and focus on optimizing profitability.

Recurring Revenue: It’s Not All Created Equal

The quality of the revenue matters too. Lenders must be able to determine whether firms are generating enough revenue per customer over time to cover the overall costs of running the business and create value for investors. That’s why it’s essential to understand the profitability of each service line they provide.

Doing this well requires detailed analysis of factors like the cost of acquiring a new customer, the variable gross profit of an existing customer and customer retention rates.

The insights are critical. They may clarify how much flexibility a software company possesses to reduce some of its discretionary spending. That flexibility will be important if high interest rates and slower growth start to suppress the returns that a firm realizes on investments sales and marketing spend.

Sizing Up the Lending Opportunity

In our view, the loan amount depends on several factors including the quality of the underlying revenue, the projected lifetime value of a company’s customers versus the cost to acquire them, and the marginal profitability of each dollar of revenue.

We believe it’s crucial to assess the underlying profitability of the business based on its contracted recurring revenues. In effect, a lender can determine the appropriate loan size based on the ratio of debt to earnings before interest, taxes, debt and amortization (EBITDA) of the business if it was run for profitability. Then the lender might use this to size and quote the loan on a debt-to-ARR multiple.

Think of a company that charges a fixed software-subscription fee—let’s call it $5,000 per month. That’s visible, regular income. And the software plays a critical role in the customer’s operations, which usually leads to high contract renewals. That’s good news for lenders who get a clear view of how much the borrower will earn each month.

Similarly, consider a software company with strong customer retention, a high variable gross margin and an efficient sales and marketing operation. This borrower may warrant a loan that’s a higher multiple of its ARR because the strong economics of each unit sold helps keep debt at a manageable multiple of its EBITDA. On the other hand, even a low debt-to-ARR loan to a software company with poor unit economics may be risky if the debt-to-EBITDA multiple is high.

Loan Covenants: Guardrails for a Pathway to Profitability

The ultimate goal—for both lender and borrower—is a business that eventually turns a profit. As we see it, loans should not be structured on a recurring-revenue basis if lenders don’t think the business can generate an appropriate profit.

Direct lenders can safeguard their investment by including protective loan covenants tied to recurring revenues, the company’s liquidity and a requirement to become profitable by a certain time frame.

For example, a five-year loan might be made on a recurring-revenue basis but with a covenant that requires the borrower to meet or beat a predetermined earnings threshold after two years.

With this “covenant flip,” the lender puts the borrower on the clock: by a certain date, the company must show that it’s generating a certain level of profit.

Covenants requiring a company to maintain enough liquidity to support growth and to meet payroll and other core needs also help lenders monitor loans. Even healthy companies can run into trouble if they fund unprofitable growth with debt.

In the big picture, we see recurring-revenue loans as an attractive way to finance growth-focused software firms and round out private credit portfolios. But two similar companies may be quite different under the hood—differences that matter in structuring loans effectively.

The views expressed herein do not constitute research, investment advice or trade recommendations and do not necessarily represent the views of all AB portfolio-management teams. Views are subject to revision over time.


About the Authors

Jay Ramakrishnan joined AB in 2014 and is a founding member, Head of Originations, and a member of the investment committee of AB Private Credit Investors. In addition, she is responsible for business initiatives such as technology-focused capital solutions, oversees investments in the healthcare/HCIT sectors, and covers select East Coast financial sponsors with an emphasis on technology, healthcare and business services. Previously, Ramakrishnan was a managing director with Barclays Private Credit Partners, and as a founding member of the business was involved in various aspects of business launch, transaction sourcing and execution. Prior to joining Barclays, she was a vice president at Goldman Sachs, in the Specialty Lending Group in New York, and in London, where she oversaw a European leveraged-loan portfolio and managed restructurings. Before that, Ramakrishnan was in investment banking at Goldman Sachs and Bear Stearns, and she started her career as an associate consultant for Bain & Company. She holds a BA (Hons) in economics from the University of Cambridge, England, and an MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. Location: New York

Shishir Agrawal joined AB in 2014 and is a founding member and Senior Managing Director of AB Private Credit Investors. He is also a member of the investment committee and heads the underwriting, execution and portfolio management of the team's investments in software and technology-enabled services. Agrawal previously held a similar role with Barclays Private Credit Partners, having first joined Barclays as an associate in the US Leveraged Finance Group. Prior to that, he was a group marketing manager and head of product management for clustering and high-availability products at Sun Microsystems. Agrawal holds a BTech in computer science and engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, an MS in computer science from Ohio State University, and an MBA in finance and accounting from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Location: Austin