Private Credit Outlook: A Maturing Market Enters Its Next Phase

05 January 2026
4 min read

Private credit is becoming a durable and indispensable component of capital formation.

Private credit is no longer a niche corner of the capital markets. It’s become a core pillar of global capital formation alongside banks and public-credit markets, supporting a growing share of corporate financing and asset-backed investment.

As the private-credit market matures, it’s also becoming more accessible to a wider range of investors. But variation in outcomes has increased. In our view, that’s a byproduct of growing scale and competition.

We expect four long-running trends to come into clearer focus in 2026:

Alpha—or return outperformance—is shifting from spread capture to solutions-oriented capabilities. Sector and asset-class specialization, combined with structuring expertise and operational depth, are likely to become primary return drivers.

Performance dispersion is widening, based on platform quality, depth of origination capabilities and the ability to manage complexity in all market conditions.

Transparency is being reframed so that it balances value-creating opacity with the need for institutional-grade governance, reporting and discipline.

Liquidity solutions are expanding as the private-credit market grows and matures, offering more tools and options for investors and managers.


Together, these developments point to a private-credit ecosystem that is no longer simply expanding, but, as we see it, maturing into a durable and increasingly indispensable component of global capital formation.

(1) From Spread Alpha to Solutions Alpha

In earlier phases of private-credit growth, returns were often driven by illiquidity premiums and excess spread. Over time, increased competition, standardized terms and better data availability have eroded some of that return potential.

Today, we believe excess returns are increasingly generated through “solutions alpha”—the application of sector and asset-class expertise, structuring capabilities and operational depth to solve problems for borrowers.

We’re seeing this happen across both investment-grade and non-investment-grade markets. Even high-quality borrowers are turning to private capital for speed and certainty of execution and customized structures aligned with long-term objectives.

Across private markets, solutions alpha is most visible in areas that reward capability over capital—complex asset-based ecosystems, infrastructure-like investments and operating businesses where sector knowledge and business model complexity matter. In these environments, capital is necessary but by no means sufficient; experience and structuring expertise are the primary sources of differentiation. As a result, excess returns increasingly migrate to platforms with operating depth, structuring expertise and the ability to manage complexity at scale.

(2) The Great Divergence: Capability-Driven Performance

As private markets mature, performance will depend less on the broad macroeconomic environment and more on capabilities. Put another way, it’s about the quality of a diversified platform rather than the credit cycle.

As we see it, origination quality, underwriting discipline and operational control increasingly determine outcomes. Defaults and stress events, for example, are still a natural part of any credit cycle. Providers who can engage with borrowers early, act proactively and protect principal will likely be better positioned to preserve value across cycles.

For investors, this divergence reinforces the importance of selectivity. In a maturing market, dispersion is a feature—not a flaw.

(3) Reframing Transparency in Private Credit

Transparency—or lack of it—is often cited as a weakness of private markets. We think that critique misses the mark. The reality is more nuanced. Private loans are typically opaque by design, offering negotiated  terms and bespoke structures that align incentives, embed risk controls and provide certainty of execution—outcomes that are harder to achieve in standardized public markets.

At the same time, opacity driven by inertia rather than intent is becoming less acceptable as the industry matures. Valuation frameworks, portfolio reporting, risk aggregation and governance standards are evolving to meet institutional expectations. But they’re not forcing private markets to mirror public-market disclosure regimes that could hamper flexibility.

(4) As Private Markets Mature, So Does Liquidity

Liquidity solutions have evolved along with private markets. That makes sense, since what were once predominantly long-duration, closed-end strategies now operate in an ecosystem that offers more ways to manage liquidity without undermining the potential to create value.

Many liquidity tools have developed within the private-equity market. Secondary markets and continuation vehicles widened options for investors while allowing managers to keep exposure to high-quality assets. These tools are becoming more relevant, and they’re increasingly extending into the private-credit sphere.

At the same time, fund-level private credit solutions such as net asset value financing, general partner financing and other structured liquidity tools have become more institutionalized. These mechanisms are not substitutes for the eventual sale of portfolio companies and investments. Instead, they’re complements that provide flexibility in periods when transaction markets are slower and enhance capital management across cycles.

We expect these liquidity solutions to expand as markets deepen, reinforcing private markets’ role as a durable, long-term component of global capital formation.

Putting It All Together

Private credit has moved past its initial growth stage to represent a key segment of financial markets. Return potential is increasingly defined by capability-driven solutions, and performance is becoming more varied. The pathways to liquidity are also becoming deeper and more varied as the ecosystem evolves.

In our view, platforms that can finance ecosystems, solve complex problems, maintain operational control and build trust through disciplined governance are best positioned for the next phase of growth. Put differently—the era of simply harvesting a liquidity premium is fading. The future of private credit will likely belong to experienced platforms with deep expertise and the ability to adapt.

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


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