4. Structural features of growth lending
As noted above, growth-lending structures are designed to combine attractive income potential with meaningful downside protection. Loans are typically issued at floating interest rates, most often 400 to 500 basis points above the prime rate and generally include rate floors to protect against declines in benchmark rates. In addition to interest income, lenders earn a mix of origination, end-of-term, and prepayment fees that can total between 1% – 7% of the loan amount. Loan maturities typically range from three to five years, although most are repaid within two to three years.
A distinctive feature of growth lending is the inclusion of warrants or success fees, usually representing 3% – 5% of the loan amount. This allows lenders to participate in a company’s upside when a liquidity event or acquisition occurs. This equity-linked element creates the potential for an asymmetric return profile that enhances total returns in favorable outcomes without materially increasing downside risk. In general, fund-level leverage is also modest, at historically around 1x, underscoring the asset class’s focus on credit quality and structure rather than financial engineering.8
Risk management is fundamental to the asset class. Unlike many middle-market loans that have become covenant lite, growth-lending facilities usually include meaningful financial covenants, such as minimum liquidity, cash-burn, or revenue/growth thresholds. These are typically paired with restrictions on leverage, acquisitions, and dividends. Lenders also conduct active portfolio monitoring, tracking operational metrics such as ARR trends, customer concentration, and cash runway. This combination of formal covenants and hands-on engagement allows lenders to identify issues early and work closely with management teams to preserve enterprise value.
Most loans are senior secured and backed by an all-asset lien, ensuring first-priority recovery in downside scenarios. Together, these features create a structure that has historically delivered consistent income and modest equity-linked upside while maintaining strong credit protections that have historically resulted in low loss rates and resilient performance across market cycles.
Monthly Market Review — November 2025
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