U.S. direct lending issuance fell 40% in the first quarter compared to the prior period, according to flow data compiled across the top fifteen private credit managers. At the same time, redemption requests hit $19.5 billion in Q1 filings, with fulfillment running at 53%—meaning half the capital that wanted out is still locked in queue. The simultaneous deceleration in origination and acceleration in redemption pressure marks the first material stress test for a sector that added $600 billion in assets since 2020.
The slowdown is most visible in software-linked exposures. At least four large managers marked down portfolio companies in the past ninety days, three of them application-layer SaaS businesses with floating-rate structures originated between late 2021 and mid-2023. The marks ranged from 8% to 22%, reflecting both covenant breaches and EBITDA misses against underwriting models. These aren't distressed outliers—they're core middle-market credits that cleared IC at 6.5x to 7.2x leverage, structures that made sense when growth multiples were 12x forward revenue and debt was priced at L+550. The marks are arriving because the exit math no longer works at 4x revenue and sponsors can't refinance into the syndicated market without stepping down a full turn of debt.
This matters because private credit's value proposition has rested on two premises: yield pickup over liquid credit and smoother NAV behavior than public markets. The first is intact—direct lending still prices 275 to 325 basis points wide of broadly syndicated loans. The second is now in question. Redemption queues function as gates by another name, and 53% fulfillment means LPs are experiencing mark-to-model lag in real time. Family offices and consultants who modeled private credit as a volatility dampener are now holding positions they can't exit at stated NAV, watching managers selectively fulfill redemptions while new commitments slow. Fundraising in Q1 2025 ran 38% below the same quarter last year, the steepest year-over-year decline since the strategy went institutional.
Allocators should monitor two specific developments over the next ninety to one hundred twenty days. First, whether any of the top ten managers move from quarterly to semi-annual liquidity windows, which would formalize the gate structure already implied by partial fulfillment. Second, whether syndicated loan desks begin pricing rescue financings for portfolio companies currently unable to refinance out of private credit structures—if that flow picks up, it suggests the marks are early and mild. The bid-ask spread between what private credit holds assets at and what the syndicated market would clear them for is now 12 to 18 points on levered software credits, per recent refinancing attempts.
The sector added $1.1 trillion in assets under management between 2019 and early 2025, much of it in the 6x to 8x leverage band that defined the late-cycle middle market. The capital that arrived in 2021 and 2022 is now encountering its first full repricing cycle, and the redemption queues are where that repricing becomes observable. Issuance doesn't restart until either the exit environment improves or managers reset return hurdles downward—and neither has happened yet.