U.S. private credit firms deployed $114 billion in direct lending during the second quarter of 2026, down from $161 billion in Q1, even as the same managers raised $87 billion in new commitments over the same period—the highest quarterly inflow since Preqin began tracking the data in 2019. The divergence is 43 basis points wider than the historical average spread between capital raised and capital deployed, according to firm-level disclosures compiled by Reuters.
The decline in lending activity came without a corresponding retreat in deal volume. Middle-market M&A transactions above $500 million held steady at 127 deals in Q2, per PitchBook, while private equity dry powder remained above $1.1 trillion. What changed was price. Median EBITDA multiples for sponsored buyouts rose to 12.8x in Q2 from 11.9x in Q1, pushing all-in financing costs on direct loans to an average of SOFR plus 625 basis points—a level at which fewer sponsor-backed deals pencil. Private credit managers, flush with capital and facing fee pressure on undeployed funds, have not yet adjusted pricing downward to clear the market.
Meanwhile, institutional allocators began rotating capital within private markets. Morningstar's Q1 flow data, released in late June, showed private credit funds recording net outflows of $4.2 billion while private equity semiliquid funds took in $11.7 billion. The shift reflects two concerns: duration mismatch in credit portfolios as rates stabilize, and a preference for vehicles offering quarterly liquidity windows over the 5-to-7-year lock-up structures still prevalent in direct lending. The largest outflows came from insurance general accounts and smaller family offices, both of which had been overweight private credit entering 2026.
The structural problem is that private credit managers raised capital against a 2024-2025 vintage thesis—higher rates, scarce bank lending, and predictable deal flow. Two of those three inputs have softened. Regional banks increased commercial lending 18% year-over-year through May, and the Treasury curve has flattened 11 basis points since March. Deal flow remains, but the returns required to justify private credit's 2.0-and-20 fee structure no longer exist at current spreads. Managers are sitting on capital because deploying it at today's prices would deliver mid-single-digit net IRRs, below the 10-12% return targets in their fund marketing materials.
Operators and allocators should watch three near-term catalysts. First, whether Ares, Blackstone, and Blue Owl—who collectively raised $34 billion of the $87 billion in Q2—reduce minimum check sizes or widen their mandate scope to deploy capital faster. Second, whether leverage multiples in sponsored deals decline below 5.5x, which would force spread widening or force sponsors to accept smaller debt packages. Third, whether the SEC's proposed amendments to private fund quarterly reporting, expected in final form by September, accelerate transparency around NAV marks and unrealized losses in existing credit portfolios. Any material markdown disclosures could slow Q4 fundraising and relieve the deployment bottleneck.
Bloomberg's 2026 institutional outlook survey, published in January, listed private assets as the consensus overweight. Six months later, the asset class is bifurcating. Equity vehicles with liquidity features are absorbing capital while direct lending funds face the market's oldest problem: too much money chasing too few deals that make sense.
The takeaway
Private credit raised $87B in Q2 but deployed 29% less. The asset class is repricing itself in real time.
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