The middle market lending landscape has undergone a seismic transformation. Private lenders now account for 85% of leveraged buyouts, up from 64% in 2019, with that figure climbing to approximately 90% in 2025.¹ This near-total displacement of traditional bank lending has created an unprecedented dynamic: private equity sponsors now face a crowded field of eager lenders competing for their attention, fundamentally shifting the power dynamics in deal financing.
The numbers tell a compelling story. The U.S. middle market encompasses over 200,000 companies representing approximately one-third of private sector GDP — a figure that would rank as the fourth-largest economy in the world behind only the U.S., China, and Japan.² With private credit reaching $1.7 trillion in assets under management and private equity dry powder at $2.7 trillion according to Preqin, the competition for quality deals has never been more intense.³
Beyond Pricing: What Actually Differentiates Lenders
While spreads have compressed to approximately 525 basis points over SOFR in the current environment, sophisticated sponsors increasingly evaluate lenders on criteria that extend far beyond headline pricing.⁴ “Standing out from the crowd requires a solid understanding of what sponsors are looking for,” notes Private Debt Investor in their 2025 Mid-Market Lending Report.⁵
Speed to Term Sheet: In competitive auction processes, sponsors routinely cite execution certainty as more valuable than marginal pricing differences. Direct lenders’ ability to provide term sheets within days rather than weeks has become a critical differentiator. Unlike the broadly syndicated loan market, which requires syndication and ratings processes that introduce timing uncertainty, private credit deals can move from initial conversation to commitment in compressed timeframes.
Documentation Flexibility: The covenant landscape reveals significant market segmentation. While covenant-lite structures have saturated the large-cap broadly syndicated loan market for over a decade, private loans to mid-sized companies maintain stronger covenants with greater lender protections.⁶ According to a Proskauer Rose survey, just 2% of lenders to the under-$30 million EBITDA market would consider a covenant-lite deal, compared to nearly half of lenders in larger segments.⁷
Workout Reputation: Perhaps no factor weighs more heavily in sponsor evaluation than a lender’s behavior during portfolio company stress. “A high-touch approach to working with borrowers and private equity sponsors plays a key role in portfolio management,” observes Kim Trick, co-chief credit officer at Twin Brook Capital Partners.⁸ Sponsors maintain long institutional memories about lenders who proved to be collaborative partners during difficult periods versus those who took adversarial positions.
The Repeat Sponsor Imperative
The most sophisticated lenders have built their franchises around repeat sponsor relationships. Golub Capital, which manages over $80 billion in capital, explicitly describes its strategy as nurturing “long-term, win-win partnerships that inspire repeat business from private equity sponsors and investors.”⁹ Audax Private Debt has invested more than $48 billion across over 1,300 investments with 300 private equity sponsors, demonstrating the scale that relationship-driven platforms can achieve.¹⁰
This repeat business model creates a virtuous cycle. Sponsors who have successful financing experiences return for subsequent deals, providing lenders with proprietary deal flow that bypasses competitive processes. For sponsors, established lender relationships reduce execution risk and enable faster deal closings — particularly valuable in competitive auction environments where timing can determine success.
Ecosystem Implications
For Private Equity Sponsors: The abundance of capital creates negotiating leverage, but the most successful sponsors recognize that optimizing for pricing alone can prove short-sighted. Building relationships with lenders who demonstrate partnership orientation during both good times and challenging periods provides option value that pure price optimization cannot capture.
For Investment Bankers: Advisory value increasingly includes helping sponsors navigate lender selection. Understanding which lenders have capacity, appetite for specific sectors, and track records with particular deal structures enables bankers to streamline processes and improve outcomes. The financing landscape’s complexity has elevated the importance of capital markets advisory within M&A mandates.
For Legal Advisors: Documentation sophistication has become a competitive battleground. Legal teams that can efficiently navigate the covenant negotiation process while protecting sponsor flexibility add measurable value. Understanding market terms and identifying which provisions are truly negotiable versus standard has become essential expertise.
For Specialty Lenders: Differentiation in a crowded market requires more than capital availability. Lenders that develop genuine sector expertise, demonstrate flexible thinking on structure, and build reputations for partnership during stress will capture disproportionate share of quality deal flow. The barbell effect identified by Lord Abbett — where mega-funds have grown too large for core middle market deals — creates opportunity for focused platforms.¹¹
For Turnaround Advisors: Understanding lender selection criteria helps advisors counsel distressed companies on which financing partners may prove most constructive. Lenders with relationship-oriented cultures and experience navigating workouts collaboratively represent better partners than those optimizing purely for short-term returns.
Looking Ahead
The lender selection dynamic will continue evolving as the market matures. With Morgan Stanley projecting private credit growth to $5 trillion by 2029,¹² increased competition will further pressure lenders to differentiate beyond pricing. Those who build genuine partnership reputations, develop deep sector expertise, and demonstrate flexibility during challenging periods will capture the most attractive opportunities in an increasingly crowded market.
Sources
¹ PGIM Private Capital, “Middle Market Remains Private Credit Sweet Spot,” December 2024. https://www.pgim.com/investments/article/middle-market-remains-private-credit-sweet-spot
² Lord Abbett, “A Closer Look at the Growth of Private Credit Markets,” November 2025. https://www.lordabbett.com/en-us/financial-advisor/insights/investment-objectives/2025/a-closer-look-at-the-growth-of-private-credit-markets.html
³ Preqin data cited in Lord Abbett, November 2025.
⁴ ABF Journal, “Middle Market Credit Shifts: Dividend Recaps Rise Amid Tech-Led Transformation,” July 2025. https://www.abfjournal.com/middle-market-credit-shifts-dividend-recaps-rise-amid-tech-led-transformation/
⁵ Private Debt Investor, “Mid-Market Lending Report,” June 2025. https://www.privatedebtinvestor.com/mid-market-lending-report/
⁶ Covenant Review, a Fitch Solutions Service, data as of June 30, 2025.
⁷ Proskauer Private Credit Insights 2023, cited in PineBridge Investments analysis. https://www.pinebridge.com/en/insights/the-enduring-appeal-of-lower-middle-market-direct-lending
⁸ Private Debt Investor, “Mid-Market Lending Report,” June 2025. https://www.privatedebtinvestor.com/mid-market-lending-report/
⁹ GrowthCap, “The Top Private Credit Firms of 2025.” https://growthcapadvisory.com/the-top-private-credit-firms-of-2025/
¹⁰ GrowthCap, “The Top Private Credit Firms of 2025.” https://growthcapadvisory.com/the-top-private-credit-firms-of-2025/
¹¹ Lord Abbett, “A Closer Look at the Growth of Private Credit Markets,” November 2025. https://www.lordabbett.com/en-us/financial-advisor/insights/investment-objectives/2025/a-closer-look-at-the-growth-of-private-credit-markets.html
¹² Morgan Stanley, “Private Credit Outlook.” https://www.morganstanley.com/ideas/private-credit-outlook-considerations







