Private Lending vs Bank Lending: Why the Credit Market Is Changing

The structure of the credit market has been shifting in a way that many investors only started noticing recently. For decades, banks were the dominant source of financing for real estate and business lending. If a borrower needed capital, the first stop was almost always a traditional financial institution. Today, that is no longer the case.
Over the past few years—especially into 2025 and early 2026—several trends have become increasingly clear:
- banks are tightening underwriting standards
- regulatory pressure continues to increase
- lending to certain sectors, particularly commercial real estate, has become more constrained
At the same time, private lending and private credit funds have expanded rapidly, stepping in to provide financing where banks are pulling back.
This shift is not temporary. It reflects deeper changes in how capital flows through the financial system.
Why Banks Are Lending Less
To understand why private lending is growing, it is important to first understand why banks are becoming more cautious. Several forces are driving this change.
Regulatory Pressure and Capital Requirements
Since the global financial crisis, banks have operated under increasingly strict regulatory frameworks.
They are required to:
- hold more capital against loans
- maintain higher liquidity reserves
- comply with tighter risk controls
These requirements make certain types of lending less attractive, especially loans that involve higher perceived risk or complexity.
Banks are not necessarily unwilling to lend. In many cases, they are simply less flexible in how they can lend.
Higher Risk Sensitivity
Recent data shows that banks continue to tighten credit standards across multiple sectors.
For example, surveys going into 2026 indicate that banks are increasing caution due to:
- concerns about economic outlook
- lower risk tolerance
- rising uncertainty in specific industries
This translates into stricter approval processes, more documentation requirements, and lower loan-to-value ratios.
For borrowers, it often means deals take longer—or do not get approved at all.
Reduced Lending in Commercial Real Estate
Commercial real estate has been one of the most affected sectors.
Banks have become more cautious due to:
- rising interest rates
- changes in property valuations
- structural shifts in sectors like office space
As a result, many real estate projects—especially transitional or value-add deals—struggle to secure traditional financing.
This is one of the key areas where private lenders have stepped in.
Structural Shift in the Credit Market
Over time, this tightening has created a measurable gap. Private credit funds now account for a growing share of lending activity. In U.S. commercial real estate alone, private credit has expanded significantly, with funds representing roughly 24% of lending volume in recent years, well above historical averages.
This is not a short-term anomaly. It reflects a structural shift in how credit is distributed.
How Private Lenders Fill the Gap
As banks become more constrained, private lenders operate under a different model. They are not subject to the same regulatory framework, which allows for greater flexibility in how loans are structured and approved.
Speed and Execution
One of the most immediate differences is speed.
Private lenders can often:
- evaluate deals more quickly
- make decisions without multiple approval layers
- fund loans within days or weeks rather than months
For borrowers, this speed can be the difference between securing a deal or losing it.
Flexible Underwriting
Banks rely heavily on standardized underwriting criteria. Private lenders take a more asset-based approach, focusing on:
- the value of the underlying property
- the borrower’s equity in the deal
- the exit strategy
This flexibility allows private lenders to finance situations that banks may consider too complex or outside standard guidelines.
Focus on Collateral
Private lending is typically structured around secured loans. In real estate lending, this means:
- loans are backed by property
- loan-to-value ratios are carefully managed
- borrower equity provides a buffer
This structure allows lenders to manage risk differently compared to unsecured corporate lending.
Expansion of Private Credit
The growth of private lending is part of a broader expansion of the private credit market, which has grown into a multi-trillion-dollar asset class.
Institutional investors—including insurance companies and pension funds—are increasingly allocating capital to private credit strategies, further accelerating the shift away from traditional bank-dominated lending.
Why This Creates Opportunities for Investors
For investors, this shift in the credit market is not just a structural change. It creates a new set of opportunities.
Access to Lending Returns
Historically, lending returns were largely captured by banks.
Today, investors can participate directly through:
- private credit funds
- real estate debt funds
- trust deed investments
This allows investors to earn income from interest payments on loans, rather than relying solely on market appreciation.
Higher Yield Potential
Private lending often offers higher yields than traditional fixed income investments because:
- it operates outside public markets
- it involves less liquidity
- it requires specialized underwriting
Investors are compensated for these characteristics through higher income potential.
Diversification Beyond Public Markets
Private lending provides exposure to a segment of the market that is not directly tied to daily stock or bond price movements.
Returns are based on:
- borrower performance
- loan structure
- contractual interest payments
This can help diversify a portfolio that is otherwise heavily exposed to public markets.
Real Estate-Backed Lending
In the case of private real estate lending, loans are typically secured by property. This creates a different risk profile compared to unsecured investments. When structured conservatively—with appropriate loan-to-value ratios and borrower equity—this type of lending can provide a combination of income and asset-backed security.
A Balanced View: Risks Still Matter
While private lending is growing, it is important to maintain a balanced perspective. Recent headlines in 2026 have highlighted that not all private lending is structured equally, and issues such as underwriting quality and transparency remain important considerations
Investors should always evaluate:
- underwriting standards
- loan-to-value discipline
- diversification across loans
- experience of the management team
Private lending is not risk-free. It is a different type of risk, structured differently from public markets.
Wrapping up
The credit market is evolving.
Banks remain an essential part of the financial system, but their role in certain types of lending—particularly real estate and transitional financing—has become more limited due to regulatory pressure and risk management constraints. Private lenders have stepped in to fill that gap, creating a parallel lending ecosystem that continues to grow.
For investors, this shift has opened the door to participating directly in lending, rather than relying solely on traditional fixed income instruments. Private lending, including real estate debt funds, has become an increasingly important part of modern portfolios because it offers income, diversification, and exposure to asset-backed credit.
Strategies such as those used by LBC Capital Income Fund, LLC operate within this evolving landscape, focusing on structured lending and disciplined underwriting. If you are exploring how private lending fits into your investment strategy, it may be worth taking a closer look at how this segment of the credit market works in practice. Reach out.
Latest posts
Blog page
Loan-to-Value (LTV) Explained: The Most Important Risk Metric in Real Estate Lending
When investors begin exploring private real estate lending or real estate debt funds, they often focus first on returns. Yield is visible, easy to compare, and naturally attractive. However, experienced lenders and investors tend to look at something else first. They look at risk structure, and one of the most important metrics used to assess […]
How Accredited Investors Build Passive Income Portfolios
At a certain point, investing stops being about chasing the highest possible return and becomes more about building a system that works consistently. For many accredited investors, that shift happens once a meaningful level of wealth has been achieved. The focus moves away from pure growth and toward income stability, capital preservation, and predictability. The […]