Bonus-Starved Bankers Are Jumping Ship for Private Credit Riches

At a finance conference in London this summer, four senior investment bankers set about persuading the room that the $1.7-trillion private credit market isn’t a threat to Wall Street. Barely three months later, two of them have jumped ship to seek their fortunes in the upstart asset class.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s Luke Gillam and Bank of America Corp.’s Murad Khaled, set to join AlbaCore Capital and Apollo Global Management, are the latest in a growing list of top bankers to make the leap. The brain drain is yet more evidence of private capital firms’ emergence as an enduring threat to banking’s traditional dominance of the lucrative corporate loan market.

At least 20 senior bankers in Europe — Gillam and Khaled among them — have switched sides since rate rises upended capital markets, according to rough estimates by Bloomberg News, as the continent’s less developed private-capital industry plays catch-up with the US. But even across the Atlantic, where the trend has been evident for longer, a string of marquee leveraged-finance names such as Barclays Plc’s Tom Blouin has joined the exodus lately.

“We’ve seen a change in the appetite for larger private credit — aka ‘mega’ — funds to hire from leveraged finance,” says Harry Oliver, a headhunter at Paragon Search Partners.

Many banks were hobbled over the past couple of years after providing billions of dollars of debt for company buyouts that they couldn’t get rid of when interest rates spiraled. Nimble private credit firms, who lend directly to companies rather than syndicating loans to a large group, stole in to grab a hefty chunk of the market