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Home Pulse 2025 Acquisition

Acquisition Financing in the Middle Market: The Shift to Alternative and Specialty Debt Solutions

byLisa Rafter
March 3, 2025
in 2025 Acquisition, Pulse

Introduction: A New Playbook for Private Equity and Specialty Finance

The middle market’s acquisition financing game has flipped over the past 15 years. Private equity (PE), armed with institutional capital hunting yield, and specialty finance, with its knack for creative solutions, have rewritten the rules. Gone are the days when bank-led cash flow lending ran the show. Since the 2008 Global Financial Crisis (GFC), sponsors have leaned hard into alternative credit—think private credit, asset-based lending (ABL), unitranche facilities, and junior secured debt. By February 2025, this shift is in overdrive: M&A deal count jumped 14% and value soared 19% in 2024, per PitchBook, while banks pull back under regulatory heat and portfolio strain.

Specialty finance providers stand out here. Their flexibility and willingness to take on risk let them craft bespoke deals that plug funding gaps and tackle complex M&A from start to finish. With PE sitting on $1.6 trillion in dry powder (Preqin, 2024) and private credit ballooning to a $2 trillion asset class—including nearly $1 trillion in direct lending, per the Federal Reserve—alternative and specialty lenders powered over 60% of middle market deals in 2024, up from 35% in 2019 (PitchBook). This article unpacks the story: banks stepping back, alternative credit stepping up, and specialty finance steering the ship toward a 2025 M&A rebound.

The Fade of Traditional Cash Flow Lending

Cash flow lending, built on juicy EBITDA, used to be the backbone of middle market deals. But since the GFC, it’s taken a hit. Banks are dialing back leveraged loan exposure, squeezed by regulations, portfolio headaches, and sector-specific woes.

Why the Retreat?

  • Regulatory Squeeze: Basel III’s “endgame” rules, rolling out fully by mid-2025, jack up capital reserves by ~20% against risk-weighted assets (S&P Global). The Fed’s 2025 stress tests push liquidity over lending (Federal Reserve), making a 5.0x leverage LBO a tougher sell—bank-originated leveraged loans are down 15% since 2022 (LSTA).
  • Portfolio Pain: Rising rates since 2022, plus the 2023 regional banking crisis, exposed cracks. Commercial real estate (CRE) faces a $3.6 trillion maturity wall through 2025, with banks on the hook for 40% of it (PIMCO). Retail, energy, and healthcare delinquencies are climbing too—S&P Global pegs the 2024 leveraged loan default rate at 2.1%, up from 1.3% in 2023, with retail defaults spiking 25% (Moody’s Analytics).

Quick Stats

  • Bank lending to nondepository institutions dropped 20% since 2020 (Federal Reserve).
  • $1.5 trillion of the $5 trillion U.S. CRE market matures by 2025 (PitchBook).
  • Retail and energy defaults lead the pack at 2.1% (S&P Global).

This pullback has left a gap—and alternative and specialty lenders are rushing in to fill it.

The Rise of Alternative and Specialty Credit

With banks on the sidelines, alternative credit—turbocharged by specialty finance—is the new MVP. PE’s hunger for equity-efficient, flexible options has fueled the surge, and specialty lenders are delivering with tailored tools for tricky M&A deals.

PE’s Push and Specialty’s Edge

PE’s raised $10 of equity for every $1 of direct lending capital since 2015 (Preqin), driving debt demand for middle market LBOs (EBITDA $10M–$75M). Private credit’s been outpacing syndicated loans since 2020 (PitchBook). Specialty lenders sweeten the deal with:

  • Mezzanine Financing: Subordinated debt with equity upside, keeping ownership intact.
  • Bridge Loans: Quick cash to smooth timing hiccups.
  • ABL: Higher advance rates on receivables, inventory (even international), or equipment.
  • Non-Traditional Collateral: Tapping IP or royalties for offbeat deals.

“Often, commercial bank financing is elusive for PE-driven add-ons or buyouts, making private credit and specialty lenders the optimal choice,” says Michael Sullivan, Managing Director at Second Avenue Capital Partners. Their focus on collateral over rigid credit boxes and covenants speeds up closings—key for M&A timelines.

Real-World Example: Ridgemont’s $750M Summit Deal

In 2024, Ridgemont Equity Partners snagged Summit Behavioral Healthcare for $750 million, skipping banks for a $500 million unitranche from Golub Capital and Antares Capital. Priced at SOFR + 650 bps with 5.8x leverage, it saved $200 million in equity and closed in 40 days—proof of specialty finance’s agility (PitchBook).

The Numbers Behind the Shift

Private credit’s assets under management hit $2 trillion in 2024, eyeing $2.8 trillion by 2028 (Preqin). Direct lending’s at $900 billion, with average deal sizes of $170 million trouncing bank loans at $80 million (Federal Reserve; PitchBook). SOFR-linked structures yield 11.6% (2008–2023), beating leveraged loans (5%) and high-yield bonds (6.8%) (Morgan Stanley).

Another Win: Levine Leichtman’s $450M Caring Brands Buy

Levine Leichtman nabbed Caring Brands for $450 million, using a $200 million ABL from White Oak Commercial Finance and $50 million junior debt from Barings. With $300 million in receivables, this 4.8x leverage deal kept equity at 33%—well below bank norms of 40–50% (S&P Global).

Closing the Gaps

Specialty lenders shine at bridging valuation disputes, collateral shortfalls, or regulatory roadblocks. “We set clear expectations and benchmark key junctures to ensure a successful close,” Sullivan adds, underscoring their role in sealing deals and steadying the ship post-acquisition.

The 2025 M&A Rebound: Specialty Finance Takes the Lead

After a sluggish 2023–2024, M&A’s gearing up for a 2025 comeback. PitchBook predicts two straight years of value growth—a first in a decade. Specialty lenders are ready to run the table.

What’s Driving It?

  • Pent-Up Demand: $1.6 trillion in PE dry powder (Preqin).
  • Stabilizing Economy: Inflation at 2.5%, SOFR dipping to 4.5% by mid-2025 (Federal Reserve).
  • Hot Sectors: Tech, healthcare, and green infrastructure, fueled by deregulation (S&P Global).

Why Specialty Wins

Banks are bogged down by a $1.5 trillion CRE refinancing wall and Basel III hikes (Moody’s), while private credit’s got $500 billion ready to deploy (PitchBook). Specialty lenders bring speed (30–60 day closings) and flexibility (like PIK toggles). “The primary integration risks challenge proforma financials—synergies often lag 12–18 months,” says James Keeley of BMO Commercial Bank, pointing to their knack for liquidity buffers that ease post-deal turbulence.

Case in Point: Blue Wolf’s $300M Shred-it Deal

Blue Wolf Capital’s $300 million acquisition of Stericycle’s Shred-it used a $180 million ABL from PNC Bank and $50 million junior debt from Monroe Capital. At 5.2x leverage, it preserved $70 million in equity—a template for 2025 (PitchBook).

Beyond the Close

Specialty lenders cushion integration risks with flexible covenants and performance tweaks, keeping deals afloat as operations settle.

Trends to Watch in Specialty Finance

Specialty finance’s M&A role is evolving fast. Here’s what’s shaping it:

  • Deregulation: “A deregulatory boost under the current administration will accelerate domestic deals,” predicts Tree Buckingham, COO of Mountain Ridge Capital. Morgan Stanley sees a 10% U.S. M&A bump in 2025, led by tech and healthcare roll-ups.
  • Tech-Powered Underwriting: AI and analytics cut underwriting time by 20% and sharpen asset valuation (JPMorgan Chase), arming specialty lenders for complex plays.
  • ESG Lending: ESG deals are up 15% in 2024 (PitchBook), with Goldman Sachs eyeing $750 billion in sustainable U.S. projects by 2030—though political shifts might cool green mandates.
  • Asset Decay: “Asset decay will sharpen valuation scrutiny,” Buckingham warns. Collateral values are down 12% since 2022 (S&P Global), pushing ABL lenders to stress-test hard.
  • Talent Grabs: PE’s chasing skilled teams, like Thoma Bravo’s $850 million Darktrace buy for its cybersecurity crew, financed with a $600 million unitranche from Owl Rock (PitchBook).

These trends demand tight due diligence—on assets, regulations, and tech—to lock in 2025 wins.

Conclusion: The New Normal

Bank-led cash flow lending’s out, and alternative and specialty credit are in. With banks wrestling $3.6 trillion in CRE maturities (PIMCO) and a $40 trillion market up for grabs (Apollo), specialty lenders are the architects of 2025’s M&A boom. For PE pros, investment bankers, and turnaround advisors, their speed, smarts, and innovative structures are setting a fresh bar for dealmaking.

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The Covenant Divide: Why Financial Protections Are Holding Firm in the Lower Middle Market

Acquisition Financing in the Middle Market: The Shift to Alternative and Specialty Debt Solutions

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byLisa Rafter
March 13, 2026
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