A deep dive into how private credit is reshaping capital markets in Mexico and the wider region.


Introduction

Private credit — non-bank lending provided by funds, asset managers, and institutional investors — is no longer a niche in Latin America. Over the past five years, the asset class has grown rapidly as local banks, constrained by regulations and risk management limits, have withdrawn from lending to real estate developers, SMEs, and even mid-cap corporates.

In Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, and Chile, the retreat of traditional banks has created a vacuum. Into that space, private credit funds, structured vehicles, and cross-border managers are stepping with targeted solutions. From mezzanine loans for industrial parks in Monterrey to structured financing for residential developers in Bogotá, private credit is emerging as a structural pillar of the alternative investment landscape.

For global investors, Latin America’s private credit market represents a blend of higher yields, structural inefficiencies, and growing institutionalization. The question is no longer whether private credit has a role in the region, but how far and how fast it will expand.


Key Developments

1. Market Growth

2. Bank Retrenchment

3. Institutional Investor Entry


Analysis & Context

Historical Comparisons

Latin America has historically experienced periodic credit scarcity. In the 1980s and 1990s, sovereign debt crises froze local lending markets, forcing corporates to depend on multilateral institutions. Today’s private credit wave differs in that it is market-driven, not crisis-driven.

Compared with Asia or Eastern Europe, Latin America’s private credit market is still underdeveloped. In the U.S., private credit accounts for 15% of corporate lending; in Latin America, it remains below 5%, though growing fast.

Sector Hotspots

Risks and Constraints


Expert Voices


Implications

For Investors

For Developers & Corporations

For Capital Markets


Conclusion

Private credit in Latin America has moved from a stopgap solution to a structural feature of the region’s capital markets. Bank retrenchment, regulatory ceilings, and global investor appetite for yield have converged to accelerate growth.

For alternative investors, the opportunity is real: higher yields, growing demand, and structural inefficiencies. But the risks — currency volatility, regulatory uncertainty, and limited liquidity — require disciplined strategies and experienced local partners.

As Mexico, Brazil, and Colombia deepen their private credit ecosystems, the asset class will increasingly shape how companies grow and how capital markets evolve. In many ways, private credit is not just filling the gap left by banks — it is redrawing the map of Latin American finance.



Sources: Preqin, INEGI, Banxico, CBRE Mexico, JLL LatAm, El Financiero, Valor Econômico, Bloomberg Línea, IDB Invest

Disclaimer:
GCM Intelligence is sponsored by Global Capital Mobility, Inc. and GCM Fund Management. All content is provided for informational purposes only and should not be considered investment advice.
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GCM Intelligence © 2025 | Sponsored by Global Capital Mobility, Inc. and GCM Fund Management

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