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Income investors who own Putnam BDC Income ETF (NYSEARCA:PBDC) just absorbed a meaningful distribution cut.

Private credit has gone from a niche corner of finance to a $1.5 trillion-plus asset class that now extends more middle-market loans than the regional banking system.

The Putnam BDC Income ETF (NYSE:PBDC) was designed to give yield-hungry investors a one-ticket basket of business development companies.

Putnam BDC Income ETF (NYSEARCA:PBDC) attracts income investors with a yield near 12%.

Credit risk repricing underway, but fundamentals stable; markets discounting stress ahead of actual deterioration. BDC valuations compressed, especially larger platforms, offering attractive entry points with resilient underwriting and diversification. PBDC skewed toward quality lenders, limiting downside while maintaining selective exposure to higher beta rebound opportunities.

A roughly 12% yield from a single ETF sounds like income investing made easy. Putnam BDC Income ETF (NYSEARCA:PBDC) packages the entire business development company (BDC) sector into one actively managed fund, giving investors exposure to the high-yield private credit market without picking individual names.

The market is panic-selling two of the most battle-tested BDCs. This creates a rare, time-sensitive window to lock in 10–14% yields at the deepest discounts. I detail the strengths, weaknesses, upside catalysts, and risks for these golden buying opportunities.

The BDC universe is small and complex. The fact that there are only two relatively small pure-play BDC indices speaks volumes about how niche BDCs are as an asset class. Given the complexity and that very likely most investors are not experts in this space, it would make sense to explore BDC ETF routes.

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In my view, BDC sell-off is overdone. Given that the sector has been so punished, there are many opportunities to lock in attractive double digiti yields. Some particular names have become so discounted that their yields are approaching 20% territory. For many high-yield investors this might seem the right zone to play.

BDCs, along with other "private credit," has been beaten-up by the press and other writers and commentators. BDC equity is discounted below its Net Asset Value to a point that is essentially "predicting" a default and loss experience far worse than the "Great Recession" of 2008-2009. Putnam BDC, an actively managed ETF, holds BDC stock that is discounted 17.9% below the Net Asset Values of the shares it holds.

Despite the headlines, the 2026 speculative-grade default rate is projected at 3.75%, down significantly from 5% in 2024. PIMCO Corporate & Income Opportunity Fund thrives by stepping in as a buyer when others are desperate to sell, scooping up high-quality debt at deep discounts. Putnam BDC Income ETF is an actively managed ETF that invests in BDCs.
