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Banking and Private Credit: What Lenders and Borrowers Must Know



Banking and private credit describes the parallel markets in which regulated banks and unregulated private credit funds both provide debt capital to corporate borrowers, with private credit having grown into a multi-trillion-dollar asset class competing directly with leveraged loans and high-yield bonds. Direct lending, unitranche structures, and other private credit instruments offer speed, flexibility, and confidentiality that syndicated bank facilities cannot always match, but they carry distinct legal risks around covenant structures, intercreditor arrangements, and shadow banking regulatory oversight that lenders and borrowers must understand before committing to a transaction.

Contents


1. Direct Lending Vs. Bank Loans: a Comparison of the Four Key Structures


Private credit and bank lending are not interchangeable. The table below maps the four principal debt structures across five dimensions that matter most when selecting a financing instrument.

Financing TypeKey FeatureTypical BorrowerLegal AdvantagePrimary Risk
Syndicated Bank LoanMultiple lenders; agent bank structureLarge corporate; investment gradeLower pricing; deep market liquidityAgent bank coordination; amendment process
Direct LendingSingle lender or small club; no syndicationMiddle market; sponsor-backedSpeed; confidentiality; flexible covenantsIlliquidity; concentration risk for lender
UnitrancheSingle facility blending senior and mezzanineMiddle market; leveraged buyoutSimplified capital structure; one credit agreementAgreement among lenders complexity; blended pricing
Covenant-LiteIncurrence-only covenants; no maintenance testsLarge cap; private equity-backedOperational flexibility for borrowerReduced lender protection; delayed default detection

Bank and leveraged finance and leveraged finance and debt finance counsel can evaluate whether a direct lending, unitranche, or syndicated bank loan structure best fits the borrower's circumstances, assess the regulatory and contractual differences between the options, and advise on the most effective debt financing structure.



2. Unitranche Financing, Covenant-Lite Loans, and Pik Interest Mechanics


Unitranche financing combines senior and subordinated debt into a single facility with a blended rate, simplifying the capital structure while creating hidden complexity in the agreement among lenders. Covenant-lite terms and PIK interest add further legal risk that both lenders and borrowers must address in the credit documentation.



What Are the Key Legal Differences between a Direct Loan and a Syndicated Bank Facility?


A direct loan is governed by a credit agreement negotiated bilaterally with a single lender or small club, while a syndicated bank facility is arranged by an agent bank and distributed to a syndicate under standard LSTA documentation that limits individual lender flexibility. Direct loans close faster without public disclosure, allow borrowers to negotiate flexible and confidential covenant packages, and are funded from institutional capital rather than bank deposits subject to prudential regulatory oversight.

 

Debt finance and loan agreement counsel can advise on the structural differences between a direct lending agreement and a syndicated bank loan, assess whether covenant and pricing terms satisfy the borrower's requirements, and develop the direct lending credit agreement negotiation strategy.



How Does a Unitranche Structure Work and What Legal Risks Does It Create?


A unitranche facility combines senior and subordinated debt into one credit agreement with a blended interest rate, and the economic relationship between first out and last out lenders is governed by a separate agreement among lenders not disclosed to the borrower. The agreement grants first out lenders the right to purchase last out positions at par upon default, grants last out lenders consent rights over amendments affecting their economics, and establishes the waterfall allocating payments between the two classes.

 

Fund finance and private equity financing counsel can advise on the legal structure of a unitranche financing, assess whether the first out and last out waterfall provisions adequately protect each lender class, and develop the unitranche and agreement among lenders negotiation strategy.



3. Intercreditor Agreements and Priority of Payment in Private Credit


When a borrower has multiple lenders across different tranches, the intercreditor agreement determines who controls enforcement and who recovers first upon default. Its terms can mean the difference between meaningful recovery and total loss for a subordinated lender.



What Legal Risks Do Covenant-Lite Structures Create for Private Lenders?


A covenant-lite loan includes only incurrence covenants triggered by specific borrower actions rather than maintenance covenants requiring regular financial ratio tests, so a lender may not discover financial deterioration until the borrower misses a payment. By that point enterprise value may have declined significantly, reducing the lender's ability to negotiate an early restructuring or obtain additional collateral before further value dissipates.

 

Financial restructuring and insolvency and insolvency and reorganization counsel can advise on the enforcement risks in covenant-lite structures, assess whether the absence of maintenance covenants creates unacceptable lender exposure, and develop the covenant negotiation and credit monitoring strategy.



How Does Pik Interest Affect a Borrower'S Legal Obligations and Restructuring Risk?


PIK interest accrues as additional principal rather than cash, reducing the borrower's current cash burden but compounding the leverage ratio with each PIK period. A lender accepting PIK terms must recognize that its exposure grows each period, the borrower's leverage rises accordingly, and a borrower with a history of PIK elections faces higher restructuring risk as the balloon payment at maturity grows.

 

Creditors' rights and distressed M&A counsel can advise on the restructuring risk created by PIK accrual, assess whether the borrower's leverage trajectory makes a PIK facility viable at maturity, and develop the PIK documentation and restructuring contingency strategy.



4. Shadow Banking Regulation and the Compliance Framework for Private Lenders


Private credit funds operate outside the bank regulatory perimeter but face SEC, CFTC, and Dodd-Frank compliance obligations that impose material requirements on the fund manager. Regulators have increasingly focused on the systemic risk implications of the shadow banking sector's rapid growth.



How Do Intercreditor Agreements Determine Who Gets Paid First When a Borrower Defaults?


An intercreditor agreement establishes the waterfall governing how enforcement proceeds are distributed, with the senior lender receiving full repayment before the junior lender receives any recovery, and contains a standstill preventing the junior lender from accelerating or enforcing security for typically ninety to one hundred eighty days after a senior default notice. This standstill preserves the senior lender's control over the enforcement and restructuring process at the moment when that control is most critical.

 

Creditors and creditors' committees and financial restructuring and insolvency counsel can advise on intercreditor payment priority and standstill provisions, assess whether the waterfall and enforcement rights protect the lender's position, and develop the intercreditor negotiation strategy.



What Regulatory Framework Governs Shadow Banking and Private Credit Fund Managers?


Private credit fund managers with assets over one hundred fifty million dollars must register with the SEC under the Investment Advisers Act, comply with Form PF reporting under Dodd-Frank, and satisfy current SEC examination priorities including conflicts of interest, fee disclosure, and valuation practices. The Financial Stability Oversight Council has flagged private credit growth as a systemic risk, and regulators have signaled increased scrutiny of leverage levels, loan quality, and liquidity risk management.

 

Financial regulatory and investment management counsel can advise on the SEC and Dodd-Frank compliance obligations applicable to the private credit fund manager, assess whether the fund structure satisfies applicable Investment Company Act exemptions, and develop the regulatory compliance and reporting strategy.


26 Mar, 2026


The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading or relying on the contents of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with our firm. For advice regarding your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.
Certain informational content on this website may utilize technology-assisted drafting tools and is subject to attorney review.

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