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Entry Multiple Creep: How Hybrid ABL-Private Credit Structures Are Reshaping Middle Market Valuations

The convergence of asset-based lending and private credit is creating structural advantages that allow sponsors to bid 0.5-0.7x higher on middle market acquisitions. With private credit surpassing $3 trillion and hybrid facilities growing 15% annually, the traditional boundaries between collateral-based and cash flow lending are dissolving —fundamentally altering deal economics.

byLisa Rafter
February 20, 2026
in Pulse

The U.S. middle market is witnessing a quiet revolution in deal financing. Asset-based lending and private credit — once distinct disciplines with separate underwriting philosophies — are converging into hybrid structures that fundamentally change acquisition economics. According to Morgan Stanley, the private credit market reached $3 trillion at the start of 2025, positioning it to become a $5 trillion market by 2029.1 This scale, combined with structural innovation, is enabling sponsors to support higher entry multiples while maintaining traditional equity cushions.

The competitive dynamics are clear. Private equity-led transactions in 2025 are paying median EV/EBITDA multiples of 12.8x in the U.S. and 11.2x in Europe — materially higher than the 9.9x and 8.5x multiples paid by corporate acquirers.2 This gap reflects private equity’s structural advantages: access to flexible private credit, tolerance for complexity and the ability to engineer capital structures that optimize leverage while managing risk. For middle market dealmakers, understanding how hybrid ABL-private credit structures enable these valuations has become essential.

The Structural Opportunity

Traditional cash flow lending and asset-based lending have operated under fundamentally different frameworks. Cash flow lenders underwrite to enterprise value, financial projections, and sponsor track records. ABL centers on liquidation value of specific assets— accounts receivable, inventory, equipment, intellectual property — with advance rates typically of 80-85% on eligible receivables and 50-65% on inventory.3 The convergence of these approaches creates financing capacity that exceeds what either could provide alone.

According to PitchBook data, hybrid ABL-private credit facilities have grown 15% annually from 2020 to 2023, with acceleration expected in 2025 as banks continue tightening traditional lending.4 The Federal Reserve estimates private credit reached $1.7 trillion in 2024, surpassing the $1.4 trillion leveraged loan market, while ABL maintains approximately $400 billion in market size.5 The combination allows borrowers to access both asset-based capacity and cash flow leverage, creating total financing packages that support premium valuations.

According to Secured Research analysis, hybrid ABL-private credit facilities achieve 24% higher average advance rates than standalone structures while maintaining traditional ABL risk parameters. For sponsors, this translates directly into deal capacity: firms employing hybrid structures can support 0.5-0.7x higher entry multiples while maintaining traditional equity cushions, creating significant competitive advantage in auction processes.

Current Leverage Benchmarks and Market Dynamics

Understanding today’s leverage environment is essential for structuring competitive bids. For mid-market leveraged buyouts, total debt of 4.0x-5.0x EBITDA represents the current market standard, with the lower end for smaller or riskier companies and higher end for larger, stable businesses. Upper mid-market deals may reach 5.0x-6.0x for high-quality targets, but anything exceeding 5.5x requires exceptional credit strength or creative structuring.6

According to PGIM data, middle market first-lien debt averaged 4.5x leverage as of September 2024, compared to 5.8x in the broadly syndicated loan market.7 Equity contributions now benchmark at 45-55% of purchase price for current LBOs—a meaningful increase from prior cycles’ 35-40% equity requirements.8 All-in cash interest costs on senior debt hover around 9-11% for quality middle-market credits, with SOFR spreads varying principally by borrower size: large-cap unitranche loans pricing at SOFR + 4.5-5% and middle market loans pricing 50-75 basis points wider.9

The market remains distinctly borrower-friendly despite elevated rates. Capstone Partners reports valuations holding steady between 9.0x and 9.5x EV/EBITDA since 2023—levels historically seen only in 2009 — with expectations that multiples will revert toward the 10.8x historical mean as rate cuts materialize and macroeconomic clarity improves.10 GF Data shows valuations for companies acquired by PE firms remaining stable at 7.2x year-to-date 2025, with notable upward pressure in the $100-250 million transaction tier where multiples rose to 10.0x compared to 8.5x in 2024.11

The Hybrid Capital Structure in Practice

The mechanics of hybrid ABL-private credit facilities reflect creative capital structure engineering. Unitranche financing — combining senior and junior debt into a single facility at a blended rate — has become the dominant structure. Deloitte’s analysis found unitranche-backed financing accounting for 66% of private debt transactions in the UK and 53% in Europe, with senior debt constituting only 12% and 29% respectively.12 For middle market borrowers, this represents a fundamental shift from multi-tranche structures toward simpler, faster-executing capital packages.

Several recent transactions illustrate the model. Pathlight Capital’s $85 million credit facility for Handil Holdings, a medical device distributor, combined a revolving line secured by accounts receivable and inventory with a term loan backed by intellectual property and fixed assets.13 White Oak ABL’s $99.5 million senior secured facility for an international infant and toddler product manufacturer included an $80 million working capital facility secured by receivables and inventories across the U.S., UK, Netherlands, and Hong Kong, paired with a $19.5 million term loan backed by intellectual property.14 These structures demonstrate how hybrid facilities can span multiple jurisdictions while maintaining asset-based risk parameters.

According to Secured Research, the blended cost of hybrid facilities typically runs 75-125 basis points below comparable unitranche structures while providing 15-20% greater operational flexibility through customized borrowing base construction. “First-out” ABL tranches embedded inside term-loan structures are gaining ground, giving senior lenders cleaner exits while mezzanine investors earn modest premiums.15

Collateral Evolution: Beyond Traditional Assets

The expansion of eligible collateral types has been essential to hybrid structure viability. Traditional ABL focused on working capital — accounts receivable, inventory, equipment —but today’s lenders have evolved their collateral set to include esoteric assets. According to CAIA analysis, modern ABL may be structured around healthcare and drug royalties, recurring revenue streams from software businesses, life sciences receivables and other non-traditional asset classes.16

Intellectual property financing has emerged as a particularly significant development. First Citizens Bank now offers loans against appraised trademarks, trade names, licenses, royalties and pharmacy scripts — assets that would have been excluded from traditional ABL structures.17 This collateral evolution enables asset-based financing for sectors historically underrepresented in ABL, including technology, healthcare services and business services — precisely the sectors commanding premium valuations in current M&A markets.

According to a Preqin survey, 58% of investors indicated they would prioritize ABL strategies in 2025, underscoring growing institutional interest in the space.18 Several North American pension funds committed to asset-based finance in 2024, with some establishing these strategies as a significant portion of their private credit allocations. The Orange County Employees’ Retirement System, for example, currently aims to deploy half of its private credit allocation to ABL and specialty strategies.19

The Valuation Multiplier Effect

The connection between hybrid financing and valuation multiples operates through several mechanisms. First, increased debt capacity reduces required equity, improving sponsor IRR math at higher entry multiples. If a sponsor can finance 55% of a transaction with debt versus 50%, that 10% relative increase in leverage translates directly into higher purchase price capacity at equivalent equity check sizes.

Second, hybrid structures provide operational flexibility that supports value creation. Private equity dry powder of $2.62 trillion at mid-2024, with buyout dry powder alone at $1.2 trillion, creates intense competition for quality assets.20 Sponsors who can offer sellers certainty of close combined with structures that provide portfolio companies ongoing financing flexibility command premium positioning in auctions. Add-on acquisitions — which represent the majority of current PE deal activity — can be funded through incremental ABL capacity rather than requiring new financing rounds.

Third, the risk-adjusted return profile of hybrid structures supports aggressive bidding. ABL components are self-liquidating, with payments reducing outstanding principal similar to a residential mortgage — a structure that fundamentally differs from bullet-maturity term loans.21 This amortization reduces default risk over the hold period, allowing lenders to price marginally tighter than comparable cash flow-only structures.

GF Data analysis shows particularly strong add-on premium dynamics. In H1 2025, add-ons valued between $1-5 million carried total debt coverage of 5.7x EBITDA versus just 2.3x for platforms — reflecting how existing ABL infrastructure can support bolt-on leverage that standalone platforms cannot access.22

Ecosystem Implications

For PE Sponsors: Hybrid capital structure expertise has become a competitive differentiator. Sponsors who develop relationships with both ABL providers and private credit funds — and understand how to combine their offerings — gain meaningful advantages in auction processes. The 0.5-0.7x multiple premium available through hybrid structuring can represent tens of millions in incremental enterprise value on typical middle market transactions. Building internal expertise in collateral valuation and borrowing base mechanics is no longer optional for sponsors competing in asset-intensive sectors.

For Private Credit Lenders and Specialty Finance Providers: The convergence creates both opportunity and imperative. Private credit funds that historically focused purely on cash flow lending are building ABL capabilities — either through organic hiring or strategic partnerships. According to Secured Research, hiring of ABL professionals by private credit funds increased 47% in 2024. Conversely, traditional ABL providers are developing cash flow overlay products that allow them to compete for larger deal sizes. The lenders who master hybrid structuring will capture disproportionate deal flow; those who remain siloed risk disintermediation.

For Investment Bankers: Advisory on capital structure has become as important as transaction origination. Banks building specialized hybrid financing capabilities command fee premiums of 25-40 basis points compared to traditional debt advisory services, according to Secured Research analysis. The complexity of these structures — spanning multiple collateral types, jurisdictions and intercreditor arrangements — creates value-add opportunity that commodity debt placement cannot replicate. Sell-side mandates increasingly require bankers who can articulate financing solutions that maximize bidder capacity.

For Legal Advisors: Hybrid structures involve layered documentation complexity. Intercreditor agreements between ABL revolvers and cash flow term loans require precise drafting around payment waterfalls, collateral release mechanics, and enforcement rights. The multi-jurisdictional nature of many hybrid facilities — White Oak’s infant products deal spanned four countries — demands cross-border legal expertise. Firms building specialized hybrid finance practices are differentiating from generalist transactional lawyers.

For Turnaround Advisors: Hybrid structures create both challenge and opportunity in distressed situations. When borrowers face stress, the interplay between ABL borrowing base availability and cash flow covenant compliance requires sophisticated navigation. However, the asset-based component often provides liquidity runway that pure cash flow structures lack, creating more time for operational remediation. Turnaround advisors who understand both the asset recovery dynamics and the covenant framework of hybrid structures can add substantial value during restructuring processes.

Looking Forward

The hybrid ABL-private credit model represents what Secured Research calls “the most significant structural innovation in middle market finance since the unitranche emerged in the late 2000s.” As banks continue retrenching from capital-intensive lending — driven by Basel III and IV implementation, new loan loss accounting standards, and unrealized balance sheet losses — private capital will continue filling the void.23

According to KKR’s Dan Pietrzak, the asset-based finance opportunity set exceeds $6 trillion today and is projected to reach $9 trillion — larger than the syndicated loan, high yield bond, and direct lending markets combined.24 This scale suggests the convergence trend will accelerate rather than moderate. For middle market participants, the message is clear: the firms that master hybrid capital structures will set pricing in their markets. Those that don’t will find themselves consistently outbid by competitors who have learned to unlock the valuation premium that structural innovation provides.

Sources:

  1. Morgan Stanley, Private Credit Outlook: Estimated $5 Trillion Market by 2029. https://www.morganstanley.com/ideas/private-credit-outlook-considerations
  2. Cambridge Law Finance Institute, M&A EV/EBITDA Multiples 2025: PE vs Corporate by Sector, September 2025. https://clfi.co.uk/insights/ma-ev-ebitda-multiples-2025-pe-vs-corporate/
  3. Financely Group, Asset-Based Lending in 2025: Private Credit Appetite and How To Win. https://www.financely-group.com/asset-based-lending-in-2025-private-credit-appetite-and-how-to-win
  4. ABF Journal, The Convergence of ABL and Private Credit: A New Frontier for Middle Market Liquidity in 2025. https://www.abfjournal.com/the-convergence-of-abl-and-private-credit-a-new-frontier-for-middle-market-liquidity-in-2025/
  5. Ibid.
  6. Private Capital Global, Private Capital Debt Benchmarks for the New Rate Environment, September 2025. https://privatecapitalglobal.com/blog/private-capital-debt-benchmarks-for-the-new-rate-environment
  7. ABF Journal, Leverage Limits: Stress-Testing Middle Market Debt Capacity in a Volatile 2025 Economy. https://www.abfjournal.com/leverage-limits-stress-testing-middle-market-debt-capacity-in-a-volatile-2025-economy/
  8. Private Capital Global, Private Capital Debt Benchmarks for the New Rate Environment. https://privatecapitalglobal.com/blog/private-capital-debt-benchmarks-for-the-new-rate-environment
  9. Capstone Partners, Middle Market Leveraged Finance Report – Q3 2025, December 2025. https://www.capstonepartners.com/insights/middle-market-leveraged-finance-report/
  10. Capstone Partners, Capital Markets Update – Q3 2025, December 2025. https://www.capstonepartners.com/insights/capital-markets-update/
  11. Forvis Mazars, Q2 2025 Middle-Market M&A Insights: Signs of Potential Recovery, September 2025. https://www.forvismazars.us/forsights/2025/09/q2-2025-middle-market-m-a-insights-signs-of-potential-recovery
  12. Acuity Knowledge Partners, Demystifying Hybrid Capital, September 2025. https://www.acuitykp.com/blog/demystifying-hybrid-capital/
  13. ABF Journal, The Convergence of ABL and Private Credit. https://www.abfjournal.com/the-convergence-of-abl-and-private-credit-a-new-frontier-for-middle-market-liquidity-in-2025/
  14. Ibid.
  15. Financely Group, Asset-Based Lending in 2025. https://www.financely-group.com/asset-based-lending-in-2025-private-credit-appetite-and-how-to-win
  16. CAIA, Asset-Based Lending: Coming of Age in the 2020s?, June 2025. https://caia.org/blog/2025/06/30/asset-based-lending-coming-age-2020s
  17. First Citizens Bank, Asset-Based Lending. https://www.firstcitizens.com/commercial/solutions/asset-based-lending
  18. Macfarlanes, The Growth of Asset-Based Finance in Private Credit Markets, January 2025. https://www.privatecapitalsolutions.com/insights/the-growth-of-asset-based-finance-in-private-credit-markets
  19. Ibid.
  20. Moonfare, What is dry powder in private equity: definition, 2025 trends. https://www.moonfare.com/glossary/dry-powder-in-private-equity
  21. Manulife John Hancock, Private credit: when direct lending and asset-based lending unite. https://www.jhinvestments.com/viewpoints/alternatives/private-credit-when-direct-lending-and-asset-based-lending-unite
  22. Middle Market Growth, Small Deals Still a Big Factor in Middle-Market Private Equity Through H1 2025, November 2025. https://middlemarketgrowth.org/fall-2025-gf-data-small-deals-h1/
  23. Brookfield, Private Credit Opportunities: The Universe Keeps Expanding, August 2025. https://www.brookfield.com/views-news/insights/private-credit-opportunities-universe-keeps-expanding
  24. KKR, Private Credit 2025: Navigating Yield, Risk, and Real Value, October 2025. https://www.kkr.com/insights/private-credit-outlook
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When Operating Partners and Lender Monitoring Teams Collaborate: The New Value Creation Paradigm

Diverse web developers collaborating about programming project talking about coding algorithm for new cloud computing user interface. team of software engineers running database system code.

byLisa Rafter
February 27, 2026
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