Debt investors dump software loans as AI disruption fears trigger market selloff

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Debt investors are offloading exposure to software companies at steep discounts as collateralized loan obligation managers brace for rating downgrades and defaults. The selloff follows Anthropic's AI tool release, which sparked fears of widespread disruption across the $1.8 trillion private credit industry. Software loans that traded at a premium months ago now sell for 89 to 98 cents on the dollar.

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Debt Investors Retreat from Software Companies

Debt investors are selling software loans at a discount in what marks the latest sign of strain rippling through an industry confronting AI disruption. In recent weeks, several collateralized loan obligation managers have begun exploring ways to reduce their significant exposure to the software sector, as they prepare for potential rating downgrades and defaults down the line, according to three CLO managers and several credit industry analysts . The push to offload these positions reveals how the pain in private credit and software continues working through the system following the software rout in January and February, largely triggered by the release of Anthropic's latest AI tools, which raised fears of widespread disruption across the technology and professional services industries

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Software Loans Face Unprecedented Selling Pressure

"Software is a sector where there is more selling coming from CLO managers than there is buying right now," said Jim Egan, co-head of securitized products research at Morgan Stanley, highlighting the elevated exposure to software within broadly syndicated loans . Collateralized Loan Obligations (CLOs), which buy up small chunks of numerous individual leveraged loans, had capitalized on the credit boom during and after the pandemic, purchasing loans that backed hundreds of software buyouts. The software and services sector now accounts for about 15% of the collateral in currently outstanding syndicated CLO deals in the U.S., with software alone making up roughly 12% of CLO holdings—the single-largest subsector by concentration, according to a February 20 estimate from Morgan Stanley

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. Software exposure in direct lending is estimated to be about 19% based on private-credit focused CLOs, Morgan Stanley said in a March 17 note

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Widened CLO Spreads Signal Market Stress

Spreads on CLOs, which represent the risk premium that companies pay on bonds over Treasuries, have widened over the past few weeks as fears of a meltdown in the $1.8 trillion private credit industry have spooked investor sentiment . According to initial estimates from JPMorgan analysts, around $40 billion to $150 billion of U.S. CLO holdings fall within sectors that are most associated with AI risk

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. A mix of investment-grade notes and high-yield leveraged loans of some software makers, including Intuit, Dayforce, and Citrix, were sold between a range of 89 cents and 98 cents on the dollar in late February and earlier in March, according to data compiled by the Trade Reporting and Compliance Engine (TRACE)

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. A few months ago, those same junk bonds and loans were trading at a premium, the data shows .

Mixed Signals on Loan Quality and Future Outlook

"We're seeing some CLO managers reduce exposure to software—particularly where positions were overweight or ahead of refinancing activity," said Al Remeza, associate managing director at Moody's Ratings. "At the same time, many view the current environment as a buying opportunity, especially for companies they believe are least vulnerable to AI disruption"

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. Intuit's shares are down about 32% so far this year, as AI disruption fears have weighed broadly on the enterprise software industry, though the company reported 18 percent revenue growth while expanding margins in the first half of fiscal year 2026 . While the current bout of selling could present a unique buying opportunity for distressed debt investors, several credit industry analysts cautioned that the buyer base for large swathes of these loans is thin. Most large private credit firms and direct lenders are unlikely to participate in large software loan deals in the near term as they grapple with investor scrutiny amid rising redemption requests at their flagship funds

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. The market now faces a critical period where credit rating downgrades could accelerate defaults, testing whether software companies can adapt quickly enough to justify their debt loads in an AI-transformed landscape.

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