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Debt Investors Are Leaving Corporate Private Credit For Real Estate

Published Jun 19, 2026
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Summary:
  • Stress in private credit is mostly in corporate lending, especially loans to tech and software firms.
  • Real estate debt is drawing money with hard collateral and steady payouts.
  • More than $800 billion in commercial property loans come due in 2026.

The cracks in private credit are showing up in one corner: loans to companies. But the nervous money is not leaving lending for good.

It is moving across the street into real estate debt.

Where The Stress Actually Is

Private credit boomed for years. Big funds lent to firms that banks would not touch.

It is just lending that happens outside banks and bond markets. The trouble now sits mostly in loans to mid-sized firms.

Much of it runs through funds called business development companies, or BDCs. Tech and software make up 20% to 40% of those loan books.

AI is now shaking up that sector. So investors are asking if some borrowers can keep paying.

Real estate debt looks different. It is backed by buildings you can touch.

The funds behind it also do not have to return cash every quarter. That makes them steadier when markets get jumpy.

If a loan goes bad, there is still a building to sell. That backstop is the whole pitch.

Investors want yield, but they hate surprises. Corporate loans are the surprise right now.

We follow where the smart money is quietly moving in Market Briefs, in five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.

Why Real Estate Debt Is Drawing The Money

Timing helps a lot here. More than $800 billion in property loans come due in 2026.

Banks have pulled back right as those bills land. So private lenders are walking through the open door.

Those private lenders already made up about 40% of non-agency property loans late last year. That share keeps climbing.

And real estate debt funds raised $51 billion in 2025. That was their best haul since 2021.

They also beat the funds that bet on property prices. Safer and higher-paying is a rare mix.

Higher rates made these loans pay more. That extra yield is part of the draw.

Property lending also fills a real gap. Someone has to refinance all those loans.

That demand is steady and large. It is not going away soon.

How This Compares To 2008

It helps to keep the scale in mind. Those BDCs hold around $451 billion in assets.

That is small next to the subprime loans that blew up the last crisis. Those topped roughly $1.5 trillion.

The funds also borrow far less than banks did back then. Analysts at CBRE think the stress stays in its own corner.

The bigger risk is what it does to lending overall. A pullback there would touch everyone.

So far, the damage looks boxed in. The wider market has barely flinched.

What To Watch

Two signals matter from here. Watch whether banks tighten their lending lines.

Also watch whether that wall of 2026 loans finds enough lenders. The shift is not panic, just money moving to firmer ground.

The worry is in corporate loans, but the money is voting for bricks.

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