
Securing cheap loan assets lets major asset managers revive CLO issuance, boosting fee income and offering investors higher‑yield exposure in a low‑rate environment.
The collateralized loan obligation market has endured a prolonged period of margin compression, driven by abundant supply of leveraged loans and heightened investor scrutiny. Asset managers, traditionally reliant on robust spreads to generate fees, have struggled to launch new CLOs that meet performance thresholds. By targeting distressed, software‑sector loans that trade at deep discounts, firms like Carlyle and BlackRock can acquire high‑quality collateral at a fraction of face value, laying the groundwork for more attractive tranche pricing and restored profitability.
Software‑focused loans occupy a niche where AI‑driven credit models flag heightened risk, often leading banks to offload these assets at steep discounts. The perceived vulnerability stems from concerns that rapid automation could erode borrowers' cash flows or that AI‑based underwriting may misprice future defaults. However, seasoned CLO managers view this as a pricing inefficiency, leveraging their expertise to assess true credit fundamentals beyond algorithmic signals. By bundling these loans into new CLO structures, they aim to capture upside while mitigating risk through diversification and active management.
For investors, the resurgence of CLO issuance offers a compelling blend of yield and credit exposure, especially as traditional fixed‑income returns remain muted. The involvement of heavyweight managers such as BlackRock adds credibility, potentially attracting institutional capital that had retreated from the sector. If the strategy succeeds, it could set a precedent for other asset classes where AI‑induced pricing anomalies exist, reshaping how credit risk is evaluated and priced across the broader financial market.
February 17, 2026 · 11:40 AM UTC
Takeaways by Bloomberg AI
As managers of collateralized loan obligations sell a rash of bank loans seen as vulnerable to AI, some buyers are seeking to pry profits out of a market that’s been squeezed by rock‑bottom margins for over a year.
Carlyle Group Inc., BlackRock Inc., Benefit Street Partners and Oak Hill Advisors are all currently buying up pools of debt as they prepare to launch new CLOs, according to people familiar with the matter.
Comments
Want to join the conversation?
Loading comments...