The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Blackstone, KKR defy global private debt slump

-

“We are focused on giving capital to winners and businesses that are going to thrive but that are unable to access the capital markets for more technical reasons.” SJ Lim

HONG KONG: Direct-lending behemoths from Blackstone Inc to KKR & Co are looking to expand in Asia’s fledgling private-debt sector, targeting firms shut out of volatile public markets but healthy enough to survive surging inflation and a potential recession.

Bucking an industry-wide slowdown, some of these alternativ­e-asset powerhouse­s are

building up their presence in the region at a brisk pace.

Blackstone is targeting a 10-fold increase in private credit assets to at least Us$5bil (Rm23.3bil) “in the near term” while Apollo Global Management and KKR both recently launched their first Asia-oriented private credit funds worth Us$1.25bil (Rm5.8bil) and Us$1.1bil (Rm5.1bil), respective­ly.

“There are a lot of growing sectors in Asia where we see increasing demand for financing, including tech, software and life science, especially at a time of market volatility and uncertaint­y,” said Roger Zhang, a managing director at Blackstone.

Private lenders globally have been shifting more toward prioritisi­ng risk control, as they steer away from companies willing to accept higher borrowing costs but more vulnerable to an economic slowdown.

This is also happening at a time when increased currency volatility is adding to the long-standing challenge in some Asian countries of curbs on foreign investment, factors that have threatened to temper the market’s momentum in the region.

“We are focused on giving capital to winners and businesses that are going to thrive but that are unable to access the capital markets for more technical reasons,” such as a lack of liquidity in public bond markets, said SJ Lim, a managing director at KKR.

KKR has made more than 15 credit investment­s totalling about Us$2.7bil (Rm12.6bil) since 2019 in the Asia-pacific region, according to a KKR spokespers­on. Positioned between equity and cheaper public debt, private credit involves businesses getting money directly from a fund, which often offers more contractua­l flexibilit­y than getting a loan from a bank or even borrowing from a shadow lender.

But bank lending remains the mainstay in Asia, given the institutio­nal knowledge lenders have built up on the various regulation­s and legal standards across countries.

The number of new private-debt funds, as well as the total amount of money they’ve all raised, has dropped since the pandemic began.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia