A broadened opportunity set

With added complexity, there are new challenges for investors seeking the optimal mix of public and private credit in a multi-asset institutional portfolio. As markets converge, it is imperative for institutional investors to achieve the right balance between public and private credit, requiring holistic investment and risk-management strategies that encompass the full credit universe.

$6 Trillion

The US life insurance industry’s total cash and invested assets in 2024—one-third of which was allocated to private credit.

Source: Moody’s Ratings

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As they pursue portfolio resilience and returns in complex markets, investors can leverage multi-asset solutions, robust data analysis, and an expanding assortment of sophisticated credit strategies to achieve their long-term objectives.”

<p>As they pursue portfolio resilience and returns in complex markets, investors can leverage multi-asset solutions, robust data analysis, and an expanding assortment of sophisticated credit strategies to achieve their long-term objectives.”</p>

Finding the right balance

First and foremost, managers need to consider what is most important to clients’ objectives when designing a portfolio comprising of public and private credit with the following considerations:

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Flexibility &
Liquidity

Flexibility & Liquidity

Public markets offer greater liquidity and often quicker mark-to-market. Meanwhile, investors are typically compensated with higher spread premium for taking on greater illiquidity associated with private credit.

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Regulatory & Tax Implications

Regulatory & Tax Implications

For insurers, regulatory considerations include evaluating capital-charge or risk-weighted capital for private credit holdings under local regimes. Implemented through rated-feeder or CLO structures, direct lending strategies are one option to capture stronger yields while bearing in mind regulatory capital requirements. The rated-feeder structure could present significant regulatory capital advantages for US- and Bermuda-domiciled insurers through optimized risk-based capital treatment.

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Diversification & Risk Management

Diversification & Risk Management

Structural protections against volatility along with robust underwriting can mitigate downside risks in private credit assets. Securitized credit can have stability advantages over public credit. Investing across different private credit segments and structures can provide exposure to a much larger pool of issuers, mitigating overall credit and concentration risk. Allocations to corporate direct lending, private real estate credit, infrastructure debt, and private ABF could thus enhance diversification with lower correlation with public credit alternatives.

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Yields

 

Yields

Private credit tends to offer a spread premium over public credit, offering investors higher yields in exchange for illiquidity.

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Duration

 

Duration

Duration characteristics can vary among public and private credit.  Most of the time, large institutional clients need to source the appropriate amount of duration in order to hedge their underlying liabilities. The duration needs of the investor and the ability to utilize derivatives, for instance, can help inform the allocation between public and private credit as well as the types of private credit.

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Fee Structures

 

Fee Structures

Private credit vehicles may have higher carried interest or management fees, and the pass-through of fund expenses can be significant.