Direct lending by US private credit firms dropped sharply in the second quarter, even as those same managers pulled in fresh capital at the fastest pace in eighteen months. The gap between capital raised and capital deployed has widened to a seven-year extreme, creating a dry-powder overhang that now exceeds $450 billion across the asset class. The mismatch is no longer a timing issue—it is a pricing standoff between sponsors unwilling to pay higher rates and lenders unwilling to underprice risk.
Second-quarter direct lending volumes fell approximately 32% from the prior quarter, according to preliminary data aggregated from fund administrator filings and disclosed mandates. That marks the steepest quarterly contraction since the March 2023 regional banking crisis, when covenant-lite middle-market credit briefly froze. Meanwhile, private credit managers raised $87 billion in Q2 commitments, the strongest fundraising quarter since late 2022, driven by insurer allocations and sovereign wealth rebalancing out of public credit. The result is a deployment rate—capital put to work as a percentage of capital raised—that has collapsed to 41%, down from a three-year average near 78%.
The disconnect reflects two structural frictions. First, private equity sponsors have delayed exit timelines and reduced leverage multiples on new deals, shrinking the addressable universe for unitranche and first-lien structures. Median EBITDA multiples on leveraged buyouts fell to 9.2x in Q2 from 10.7x a year earlier, and total deal count in the middle market dropped 19% year-over-year. Second, base rates on direct loans have reset higher—SOFR-plus spreads now average 575 basis points for sponsored LBOs, up from 485 basis points in mid-2023—but equity sponsors are resisting those levels, preferring to extend hold periods or pursue strategic sales rather than accept the new cost of capital. The result is capital raised without a home.
Allocators should watch three follow-on developments over the next six months. First, whether private credit managers begin returning capital to LPs or offering fee holidays to preserve net returns—both of which would signal that the deployment drought is structural rather than cyclical. Second, whether the spreads on broadly syndicated loans tighten enough to pull sponsors back toward traditional bank credit, eroding private credit's pricing power. Third, whether direct lenders pivot toward asset-based structures—NAV financing, subscription lines, or GP-led secondaries—where deployment is less dependent on sponsor transaction volume. The first signs of that pivot are already visible in fund marketing materials, where "flexible capital solutions" has replaced "middle-market lending" as the lead descriptor.
The dry-powder figure will cross $500 billion by year-end if current fundraising and deployment trends hold, creating the largest uninvested allocation in private credit history and the clearest buyer's market for equity sponsors in five years.