Lenders are getting squeezed by aggressive side deals. The cheap money era has created a battlefield in debt markets.

The Big Picture

Markets: The Private Equity Side-Deal Squeeze

Years of near-zero interest rates forced debt investors to chase yield wherever they could find it. Private equity, always hungry for financing, offered tempting opportunities. Now, with rates higher, the dynamic has shifted. Lenders are discovering that terms they accepted under yield pressure leave them disadvantaged.

Private equity owners and advisors have developed complex structures that prioritize their returns. These maneuvers, described as "unprecedented" by Bloomberg's Luca Casiraghi, extract value before lenders can claim their share. The result is a quiet wealth transfer from debt holders to equity sponsors.

Side deals are rewriting the rules of who wins when companies struggle.

Why It Matters

Why It Matters — investment
Why It Matters

This isn't just contract theory. Credit markets are the backbone of the financial system. When lenders lose confidence they'll be treated fairly, they pull back. That raises the cost of capital for everyone from small businesses to real estate developers.

The practice hits real estate particularly hard. Many commercial properties were bought with cheap debt during the low-rate era. Now, with values adjusting and financing costs higher, private equity owners might use side deals to protect their equity at lenders' expense. This could further destabilize commercial property markets.