Ten years after leaving Carlyle, Churchill’s founders have created a $50 bln business

Fortune · Courtesy of Churchill

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One of the biggest comebacks on Wall Street has been about a decade in the making. In 2015, the four founders of Churchill Financial split with their private equity owner, Carlyle Group, and relaunched their business with investment advisor TIAA. Today, the firm known as Churchill Asset Management is one of the largest direct lenders with $50 billion in committed capital.

Churchill is a major player in private credit, one of the hottest sectors in alternative finance. Private credit refers to firms, which are not banks, that offer loans to businesses, typically small and medium-size companies. These companies are usually too big or risky for banks and too small for the public bond markets. Demand for these services has soared so much that BlackRock expects the global private debt market to hit $3.5 trillion in AUM by the end of 2028.

Like nearly all players in the private credit sector, Churchill has experienced significant growth. Last year, Churchill was a lender in over 450 portfolio investments, said Churchill founder and CEO Ken Kencel. This year, the firm ranked as the second most active U.S. middle market PE lender in the second quarter, behind the much bigger Ares Management, according to league tables data from PitchBook. "We were the number one most active direct lender in the United States last year," Kencel said.

Kencel, in fact, claims he’s one of the first to publicly state that the private credit markets are in the midst of a Golden Age. “We're certainly in a good period of time as it relates to financing and private credit in the middle market,” he said.

Churchill doesn’t focus on the high-profile, $10 billion-plus-size deals that make headlines, such as Silver Lake’s $13 billion buy of Endeavor. Instead, Churchill typically provides loans of up to $500 million to middle market companies with $10 million to $100 million in Ebitda, Kencel said. He added that Churchill’s senior lending team did 23 new investments and 30 add-ons in the second quarter of this year, valued at nearly $4 billion.

The private credit market is dealing with a business environment where mergers have slowed significantly since 2021’s record setting pace. The middle market, though, has rebounded better than large deals, Kencel said. For Churchill, the number of senior lending financings in the second quarter tripled year over year and doubled compared to Q1, he said. Churchill doesn’t target tech startups but established businesses that are owned by private equity. Clients include Clean Solutions Group, which makes nonwoven filtration and cleaning products; Ascend, which partners with accounting firms; and Heartland Paving Partners, a provider of commercial asphalt and concrete maintenance services.