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“It’s a huge differentiator” to have dedicated and experienced personnel to deal with struggling borrowers, says Tim Lyne, CEO of private credit specialist Antares Capital, in the latest Credit Exchange podcast with Lisa Lee. Recent entrants, funds raised in the past five years, often do not.
On the M&A front, Lyne doesn’t expect to see a great volume of M&A transactions this year, or indeed in the first quarter of next year. That’s because Antares’ volume on the new business side is average: “if it was going to be great, we would be seeing some of those deals come in the shop already,” he says.
Private credit could have financed the $20bn of debt for Electronic Arts, but it would have been a stretch. But that will not necessarily be true for much longer, he observes. “If I fast-forward 3-5 years from now, I think $20[bn] will not be challenging.”
There are also too many players, Lyne says, which is compressing fees. With more than $85bn in AUM, Antares has scale, and Lyne says the biggest private credit lenders will continue to get bigger. But for the players in the industry that are not of scale, “it’s going to be incredibly challenging for them to continue to grow over the next five years.”
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“It’s a huge differentiator” to have dedicated and experienced personnel to deal with struggling borrowers, says Tim Lyne, CEO of private credit specialist Antares Capital, in the latest Credit Exchange podcast with Lisa Lee. Recent entrants, funds raised in the past five years, often do not.
On the M&A front, Lyne doesn’t expect to see a great volume of M&A transactions this year, or indeed in the first quarter of next year. That’s because Antares’ volume on the new business side is average: “if it was going to be great, we would be seeing some of those deals come in the shop already,” he says.
Private credit could have financed the $20bn of debt for Electronic Arts, but it would have been a stretch. But that will not necessarily be true for much longer, he observes. “If I fast-forward 3-5 years from now, I think $20[bn] will not be challenging.”
There are also too many players, Lyne says, which is compressing fees. With more than $85bn in AUM, Antares has scale, and Lyne says the biggest private credit lenders will continue to get bigger. But for the players in the industry that are not of scale, “it’s going to be incredibly challenging for them to continue to grow over the next five years.”

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