(Bloomberg) -- Private credit is going places that big banks wouldn’t dare.

In the race to win debt deals that fund leveraged buyouts, direct-lending firms are in discussions to deploy one of the more unusual tools of finance: allowing a company to pay interest by taking on additional debt.

It’s a rare structure for a big new buyout deal, which are normally financed by banks arranging high-yield bonds and leveraged loans and sold to institutional investors. For those watching the rapid growth of private credit, in which investment firms bypass banks by arranging loans directly, it highlights the degree to which the industry is able to combine heft and flexibility to upend how multibillion-dollar deals are traditionally put together. 

The payment-in-kind option for part of the loan, known as a PIK feature, is an arrangement being considered by private credit lenders including Apollo Global Management Inc., Blackstone Inc. and Oaktree Capital Management. The group is in competition with banks for the $5.5 billion debt backing the takeover of health-care technology firm Cotiviti Inc. 

While it’s possible the PIK option won’t happen for this deal, their ability to quickly offer more appealing options, in this case a very borrower-friendly concession, is partly why private credit has been so successful in taking business away from Wall Street heavyweights.

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Banks, on the other hand, are in a weaker position. They have been saddled with deals they underwrote before credit markets tumbled last year. That’s left them struggling to offload the debt to institutional investors that became more bearish and made it more challenging to compete with terms being offered by private lenders.

US leveraged loan prices plunged to about 92 cents on the dollar last year, from near par at the start of 2022. Those prices started to rebound this year, and if that were to continue, it would ultimately allow banks to once again regain a competitive edge.

But for now, what was once their winning tactic — the ability to corral lots of investors in the market and put their balance sheet at risk — is now their disadvantage. 

Elsewhere:

  • Investment-grade corporate bonds have erased almost all of their 2023 gains as stubborn inflation data lead traders to reverse course on the timing of rate cuts by central banks. The total return for the debt globally is now just 0.6% since the start of the year following the worst February on record, according to Bloomberg indexes. It’s a remarkable turnaround for high-grade bonds, after a record jump in January.
  • China Evergrande Group, has yet to reach an agreement with major creditors on a restructuring framework crucial to avoiding potential court-ordered asset liquidation, Alice Huang and Jackie Cai reported. For more on Evergrande’s restructuring efforts, see the latest Credit Edge podcast.
  • China Fortune Land Development Co., the first of China’s big builders to default, is said to plan its first onshore-bond payments in a year under its domestic restructuring framework. And a unit of Shimao Group Holdings Ltd. wants until 2027 to pay off some yuan notes.
  • Serone Capital Management has become the latest European hedge fund to liquidate a series of leveraged loans once destined to become a collateralized loan obligation under the management of PGIM Fixed Income. With diminishing chances of bundling the debt into CLOs profitably, at least in some cases, hedge funds are responding to a partial recovery in loan prices by selling off older warehouse lines of credit.
  • Ares Management Corp. is planning to launch a private credit fund targeting wealthy individual investors in Europe, hoping to get a slice of an increasingly sought-after pool of capital in the alternative debt markets.
  • Sotheby’s is pitching investors a first of its kind: a securitization of personal loans to the wealthy secured by their art collections, Carmen Arroyo and Charles Williams report. Discussions about the offering remain at the early stages but Sotheby’s expects to bring the asset-backed security to the market later in the year.

 

--With assistance from Kevin Kingsbury, Yuling Yang, Bruce Douglas, Alice Huang, Jackie Cai, Carmen Arroyo, Charles Williams, Tasos Vossos, Josyana Joshua and Finbarr Flynn.

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