The reliance on payment-in-kind (PIK) interest—where borrowers defer cash payments by adding them to loan balances—further obscures the sector's financial health. When excluding PIK, which BDCs record as income despite the lack of immediate cash inflow, the median coverage ratio drops to 0.89. This accounting practice masks borrower stress, allowing firms to defer the reality of weakening credit quality while maintaining the appearance of stability.
Adjusting for PIK reveals that 33 of these lenders currently maintain coverage below the critical 1.0 threshold, an increase from 25 on a reported basis. While firms can temporarily bridge these gaps using fee waivers or retained earnings, the buffer is thinning. Societe Generale analysts noted that widespread PIK usage risks delaying the recognition of rising leverage until it is too late to mitigate defaults.




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