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JPMorgan Chase has tightened restrictions on its financing to private credit organizations, with financial professionals aiming to mitigate hazards as apprehension grows concerning the loanworthiness of enterprises within their holdings.
The bank communicated to private credit providers that it had lowered the appraisal of specific loans within their investment portfolios, which serve as the collateral these funds utilize to secure borrowing from the institution, according to individuals familiar with the situation.
This action will restrict the sum of money JPMorgan will advance to private credit entities against those particular loans moving forward — signaling that established Wall Street banks are becoming wary of a sector that has expanded quickly as non-bank lenders emerged as primary financiers for higher-risk borrowers.
The devalued loans pertain to software enterprises, which are perceived as especially susceptible to the advent of AI.
Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan’s chief executive, informed investors at the bank’s leveraged finance summit last week that it was exercising greater caution in providing credit against software assets, as reported by two individuals briefed on the confidential discussions.
Troy Rohrbaugh, co-chief executive of JPMorgan’s commercial and investment division, communicated to financial analysts at a company briefing in February that the bank was adopting a more conservative stance compared to its counterparts regarding the perils in private credit.
“As the global landscape becomes more unpredictable […] this outcome should be anticipated,” he stated, adding: “I’m astonished that people are surprised.”
An individual apprised of the bank’s decision mentioned that the valuation reductions did not trigger margin calls for funds but were implemented to proactively decrease the credit volume available to these funds.
Private credit executives indicated they had not observed other banks adopting a similar perspective as JPMorgan.
“They have been more challenging in the past three months,” the head of one fund remarked concerning JPMorgan’s readiness to extend back leverage. He further added that JPMorgan rarely got “flustered and this is the first instance we’ve encountered a minor issue”.
JPMorgan declined to offer comments.
Investors are apprehensive that AI will significantly disrupt business software companies, with close examination focused on these firms and their private capital benefactors who injected hundreds of billions of dollars into this segment.
Publicly traded software equities and debt have all experienced a sharp decline this year. Private credit lenders, conversely, typically retain loans for their entire duration and have not adjusted the value of their portfolios in tandem.
Private financiers have asserted that enterprise software companies continue to grow and anticipate their loans will maintain performance, as investors provide backing to the borrowers.
The expansion of the private credit sector has been bolstered by funding from regulated banks, a form of debt crucial for enhancing returns beyond high-yield bond or leveraged loan investments.
Banks including JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America have all extended substantial credit to the industry, partly because regulations permit them to set aside less capital than if they were directly lending to clients.
The fundraising capability of private credit firms, which attracted $400bn from affluent individuals and hundreds of billions more from sophisticated institutions since the close of 2020, has enabled these funds to offer larger loans and directly compete with banks on multi-billion dollar leveraged buyouts.
This included financing major acquisitions when software businesses commanded high valuations due to work-from-home trends, such as Thoma Bravo’s $6.4bn purchases of customer service software companies Medallia and Permira, and Hellman & Friedman’s $10.2bn acquisition of Zendesk.
That debt is reaching maturity in the forthcoming years, and a significant portion of it faces a considerably altered outlook.
JPMorgan stands somewhat as an exception in the private credit financing sector, as it retains the discretion to reassess asset values at any point. Most other banks necessitate triggers like missed interest remittances.
Private credit funds have the option to contest these valuations, according to a sample credit financing agreement examined by the FT. This process could span months and necessitate an independent third-party appraisal. Meanwhile, the bank’s assessment remains in effect.
The bank considers both individual analyses and macroeconomic elements when appraising loans, according to another person familiar with the bank’s perspective. It also refers to public benchmarks, such as investment vehicles that acquire private credit loans, and occasional private transactions it can assess.
“The purpose is to carry it out as required, not solely when a crisis emerges,” one person remarked.

