Inside the Direct Lending Market
In this Q&A with PDI, Tyler Gately and Stuart Mathieson discuss how mid-market direct lending continues to evolve, offering durable income, downside protection and attracting strong investor demand.
Private credit has grown significantly and drawn increased attention. What do you think is misunderstood about the asset class today?
Tyler Gately: Private credit has certainly come under a brighter spotlight. As the market has grown, periods of uncertainty have drawn more attention to direct lending in particular, prompting questions around whether the strategy itself is undergoing a fundamental shift. In reality, many of the core characteristics that define traditional mid‑market lending – senior positioning in the capital structure, contractual cashflows, and an emphasis on downside protection – remain firmly intact.
Stuart Mathieson: That distinction is important. Headlines often focus on a handful of high‑profile defaults or periods of repricing and use them to frame the state of the entire market. Direct lending has always been a sub‑investment grade asset class where outcomes naturally diverge. What determines results is not the absence of credit stress,
but the quality of underwriting, documentation and portfolio management behind each strategy. Without that context, it’s easy to conflate isolated outcomes with broader structural deterioration,
but the reality is more nuanced.
26-5487348