The surge in retail private credit, which has seen portfolios grow from $21.5 billion to nearly $400 billion, traces back to a 2020 SEC decision. By granting an exemptive order that permitted Business Development Companies (BDCs) to offer multiple share classes—similar to mutual funds—regulators inadvertently cleared the path for commission-heavy sales models. Before this, non-traded BDCs struggled to gain traction because they lacked the fee structures necessary to compensate broker-dealers for their distribution efforts.
This shift fundamentally altered the wealth management landscape. While institutional investors and fee-only advisors typically access Class I shares, which carry no sales loads, retail clients are often funneled into Class S or Class D shares. These products include upfront commissions of up to 3.5% and ongoing annual servicing fees. The financial impact on investors is material: an analysis of Blue Owl’s Credit Income Corp shows that a $100,000 investment in Class I shares would have outperformed the commission-heavy Class S equivalent by roughly $16,300 since 2021.





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