Several institutional private credit managers have adjusted software company valuations downward in recent quarters, according to portfolio filings analyzed by Forbes. The write-downs span early-stage SaaS platforms and mid-market vertical software businesses, with adjustment timing clustered between Q4 2025 and Q1 2026. No manager has disclosed aggregate markdown figures, but the pattern suggests a sector-wide repricing of $30 billion to $50 billion in software exposure.
The marks follow a prolonged period of static valuations across private credit portfolios, even as public software comparables declined 22% to 38% from their 2021 peaks. Private credit funds typically hold Level 3 assets—illiquid positions valued using internal models rather than observable market prices. This structure allows funds to smooth volatility but creates a valuation lag when fundamentals deteriorate. Software companies, which commanded 12x to 18x revenue multiples during the zero-rate era, now trade closer to 4x to 7x in public markets. Private portfolios are catching up.
The Forbes analysis highlights a structural issue: private credit's $1.5 trillion asset base relies on self-reported net asset values that can deviate from economic reality for quarters at a time. Unlike publicly traded debt, where bond prices update daily, private credit marks are reviewed quarterly and subject to manager discretion. Limited partners receive NAV statements that may not reflect current exit values. The software write-downs suggest managers are now acknowledging what secondary buyers have known since mid-2025—that many portfolio companies cannot support their stated valuations at current revenue growth rates and margin profiles.
This matters because private credit has absorbed $400 billion in institutional capital since 2022, much of it from pension funds and insurance companies treating the asset class as a bond substitute. If software represents 15% to 20% of total private credit exposure, as industry surveys indicate, then the repricing affects portfolios worth $225 billion to $300 billion. Family offices and endowments that allocated to private credit on the assumption of stable, bond-like returns now face mark-to-market volatility they did not underwrite. The secondary market for private credit positions, which priced at 88 to 92 cents on the dollar in Q4 2025, suggests the public write-downs are conservative.
Allocators should monitor two developments. First, whether credit funds holding software debt experience payment defaults or covenant breaches in the next six to nine months, forcing additional marks. Second, whether the pattern extends beyond software into other high-multiple sectors financed during the 2020-2022 vintage years—digital health, fintech, and consumer subscription businesses. Secondary transaction volume in private credit has tripled since 2023, reaching $18 billion in 2025, which means price discovery is accelerating.
The valuation adjustment is not a liquidity event. It is a recognition event. Private credit's growth from niche strategy to mainstream allocation was built on the premise that illiquidity justified a premium and that portfolio companies would grow into their entry multiples. Software write-downs indicate the second assumption is breaking. Fund managers who delayed marks to avoid triggering performance clawbacks or redemption queues are now adjusting. The next vintage of private credit funds will price loans more conservatively, but the $1.5 trillion already deployed will reprice over the next 18 to 24 months as companies refinance or exit. The Forbes analysis caught the beginning, not the end.