Finance News

JPMorgan Chase-led group reins in credit


The JPMorgan Chase & Co. building before the ribbon cutting ceremony, at the firm’s new headquarters at 270 Park Avenue, in New York City, U.S., Oct. 21, 2025.

Eduardo Munoz | Reuters

A JPMorgan Chase-led group of banks cut their exposure to a private credit fund co-managed by KKR days before the asset manager announced it was spending $300 million to prop up the troubled vehicle.

The fund, FS KKR Capital Corp., said Monday in a release that KKR will inject $150 million into the fund as equity and spend another $150 million to buy shares from investors who want to exit.

Those moves, labeled “Strategic Value Enhancement Actions” by the fund, came after the JPMorgan-led group on Friday slashed its credit line by $648 million, or about 14%, to $4.05 billion. Some lenders may have exited entirely rather than extend their commitments, according to the filing.

The fund, co-run by KKR and the alternative asset manager Future Standard and often referred to by its ticker, FSK, has become one of the most visible fault lines in the private credit story. Its shares have plunged by nearly half over the past year and trade at a deep discount to the fund’s net asset value.

In March, Moody’s downgraded FSK’s ratings to junk amid mounting stress in the portfolio. Since then, loans to software maker Medallia and dental services firm Affordable Care have stopped paying interest, FSK executives said Monday.

FSK said it had losses of $2 per share in the first quarter, or about $560 million in total losses given the roughly 280 million share count, as the fund’s net asset value fell about 10%.

“We are disappointed by our recent performance,” FSK President Daniel Pietrzak told analysts Monday.

The firm’s read of the situation and KKR’s actions to prop up the fund “support our view of a disconnect in the trading price of FSK versus its intrinsic value,” Pietrzak added.

FSK loans that are no longer generating income jumped to 8.1% by the end of the first quarter from 5.5% at year-end, the fund said.

Further to fall?



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