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Across Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Norway and Iceland, a shift is under way. Pension funds and insurers, long anchored in listed equities and government bonds, are steadily reorienting their portfolios towards private credit. Regulatory reform, surging deal volumes and the hunt for illiquidity premium are all accelerating a trend that is beginning to rival the most mature private debt markets in Europe.
The Big Picture
The global private credit market has undergone nothing short of a revolution. From a niche corner of alternative finance in the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis, it has grown into a $1.7 trillion asset class expanding at 13% per year. Nearly half of the 800 global institutional investors polled in Nuveen’s 2025 EQuilibrium survey said they planned to increase their private credit allocations, a statistic that would have been unthinkable just a decade ago.
The Nordic region is no exception to this trend, and in some respects it is ahead of it. According to Deloitte’s Private Debt Deal Tracker for Spring 2025, deal volumes for private debt lenders across the Nordics continue on a solid upward trajectory. Sweden alone has registered 119 private credit transactions over the past four years — an extraordinary figure for a market of its size. Denmark, Norway and Finland are following close behind, with meaningful and growing dealflow. Against this backdrop, the question for Nordic institutional investors is no longer whether to invest in private debt, but how quickly, and in what form.
“The Nordic region is not just participating in the global private credit boom — in deal volume terms, it is punching well above its weight.”
Sweden: Structural Reforms Unlock Ambition
Sweden’s AP buffer funds, collectively holding around SEK 2 trillion (approx. €185 billion), have long been significant players in alternatives. But a sweeping legislative reform, taking effect from 1 January 2026, has fundamentally changed the rules of engagement. The number of buffer funds has been consolidated from five to three, and crucially, AP2’s cap on illiquid assets has been lifted to a maximum of 50% of its portfolio. In the same reform, AP6, the private equity specialist, was merged into AP2, creating a heavyweight that will be substantially more weighted towards unlisted assets going forward.
For AP2, listed and unlisted credits were already key contributors to its 2024 return profile. With the new framework in place and a materially higher illiquid asset ceiling, the merged fund is expected to build out its private credit exposure considerably over the coming years. The reform has been widely interpreted as a structural green light for private markets allocations across the Swedish public pension system.
SH Pension: A Model Private Credit Allocator
While the AP funds are the most visible players, arguably the most instructive case study in the Swedish market comes from SH Pension, a smaller occupational scheme that has quietly built one of the most sophisticated private credit allocations in the country. Private credit now accounts for approximately 15% of the fund’s total portfolio, with around two-thirds invested in senior private debt (primarily senior loan structures) and the remaining third allocated to more opportunistic strategies including specialty finance and other credit opportunities.
SH Pension’s broader alternatives allocation, spanning private equity, private credit and infrastructure, now represents 40% of its total portfolio, a remarkable figure by any standard, and one that reflects a deliberate multi-year strategy rather than a reactive pivot. The fund began meaningfully increasing its focus on alternative assets in 2022, and its current positioning may well serve as a template for other Swedish occupational schemes looking to improve long-run risk-adjusted returns.
Denmark: Pension Funds Lead the Way
Denmark has perhaps the most developed institutional private debt culture in the Nordic region. The country’s large commercial pension funds, including ATP, PFA, PensionDanmark and PKA, have been early movers in building out dedicated internal teams and direct investment capabilities in unlisted credit, and their approach is now maturing into something more systematic.
PensionDanmark stands out as the most advanced. The fund has recently completed what it described as its biggest single unlisted credit investment to date, a milestone that signals not just growing appetite but growing confidence in internal sourcing and underwriting capabilities. PensionDanmark’s private debt team covers a wide spectrum: infrastructure loans, structured finance, corporate direct lending and credit fund commitments, approached through both senior secured, junior and mezzanine structures. Listed and unlisted credit also emerged as key performance contributors to the fund’s 2024 results, generating returns of between 6% and 10%, particularly valuable for its older member cohorts, who carry lower equity exposure than younger savers.
The macro backdrop is supportive too. Denmark’s National Bank has explicitly acknowledged the structural logic of pension funds investing in direct lending and private credit, citing higher expected long-term cash flows and the ability of long-duration liabilities to absorb illiquidity premium over time. With 26% of Denmark’s $782 billion in pension assets invested in the United States as of March 2025 (up from 16% in 2018), some funds are now reviewing the geographic balance of their portfolios amid geopolitical uncertainty — a development that could, at the margin, direct more capital towards domestic and European private credit.
CVC’s €10.4 Billion Direct Lending Milestone
A landmark transaction in late 2025 underscored how the Nordic institutional market is connecting with global private credit managers. CVC Credit’s fourth European Direct Lending fund closed at €10.4 billion in October, a dramatic increase over the €6.3 billion raised in 2022 and €1.3 billion in 2020. CVC has a significant operational footprint in Denmark through portfolio companies including STARK Group, Scan Global Logistics, Hempel and Twoday, giving Nordic institutional investors both familiarity with the manager and visibility into its underlying borrower network. While LP names were not publicly disclosed, Nordic pension capital is widely understood to have participated in the raise.
“PensionDanmark has recently completed what it described as its biggest single unlisted credit investment to date — a milestone that signals growing confidence in internal underwriting capabilities.”
Norway: The Outlier – and its Reasons
Norway presents a striking paradox. It is home to the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund, the Government Pension Fund Global, managed by Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM) and yet the country’s institutional exposure to private debt is among the lowest in the Nordic region. The fund’s 2025 allocation stood at 71.3% in listed equities, 26.5% in fixed income and 1.7% in real estate, plus a nascent 0.4% in unlisted renewable energy infrastructure. Private debt is explicitly outside its mandate, and there is currently no political or management appetite to change this.
At the domestic level, Norway’s non-bank financial institutions, life insurers and pension funds, provide around just 1% of total corporate credit, according to Norges Bank’s 2025 Financial Stability report. Direct lending from these entities remains a marginal activity. The reasons are partly structural: Norway’s banking system remains relatively robust, reducing the displacement effect that has driven private credit growth in markets where bank lending has retrenched more sharply.
However, the horizon is not entirely static. Amendments to AIFMD II at the European level are expected to make it materially easier for alternative investment funds to engage in loan origination and lending, including in Norway. Norges Bank has explicitly flagged this regulatory evolution as a potential catalyst for increased private NBFI lending in the years ahead. For those with a patient outlook, Norway’s underdevelopment relative to its neighbours may ultimately represent opportunity.
Finland: Reform on the Cusp of a Step Change
Finland’s earnings-related pension system is currently undergoing a structural reform that is widely expected to unlock greater appetite for illiquid alternatives — including private credit — across its four major pension insurers: Ilmarinen, Varma, Elo and Veritas. The reform’s significance was articulated clearly by Ilmarinen’s Chief Investment Officer Mikko Mursula, who noted that it ‘improves private-sector pension providers’ opportunity to pursue better long-term returns on pension assets by carrying higher risk in investment portfolios.’
Finland’s major pension funds have historically relied on external managers for their private credit exposure, given the scale required to build internal teams. But with reform removing some of the structural constraints on risk-taking, the case for building more direct capabilities — or at minimum scaling up fund commitments — is strengthening. Ilmarinen’s CIO has been candid about the opportunity set: noting that some private debt products and managers generate returns of 2–3%, while in the riskier end of the spectrum, return levels of 10–12% are now visible. The implication is that Finnish pension funds are becoming more discerning, and more ambitious, about how they access the asset class.
The funds themselves are in strong financial health. Ilmarinen posted an 8.1% annual return in 2025, outperforming Varma’s 7.5% and Elo’s 7.4%. Veritas led the field with an 8.7% gain. Private credit contributions were not separately broken out, but alternatives were a meaningful driver of performance across all four.
Iceland: Appetite Constrained, but Growing
Iceland occupies a distinctive position in the Nordic private debt story: a country with genuine appetite for private markets, but one where structural and legislative constraints have slowed the build-out of private debt allocations specifically.
The most significant of these constraints is a legislative cap that restricts Icelandic pension funds to a maximum of 20% of their portfolio in unlisted securities. LV, Iceland’s largest open pension fund, does not currently plan to allocate to private debt. LV’s CIO has been explicit that within the unlisted cap, he would rather allocate to higher-returning asset classes such as private equity. However — and this is important — he has indicated the fund would reconsider private debt if the Ministry of Finance were to lift or substantially revise the unlisted investment ceiling. The policy conversation is live.
The domestic market context is also relevant. Iceland’s alternative fixed income market began in earnest after the 2008 global financial crisis, when the contraction of the listed market forced the fund management arms of local banks to innovate. Over the past five years, most larger Icelandic fund management houses have begun offering private debt funds — creating a domestic ecosystem that is nascent but growing.
Iceland’s pension sector is also undergoing rapid consolidation, which may ultimately increase the scale and sophistication with which the surviving funds approach alternatives. The ISK 190 billion Lífsverk Pension Fund merged with the ISK 477 billion Almenni Pension Fund, and ISK 562 billion Frjálsi merged with the dental pension fund LTFÍ, all by January 2026. The country now has 21 pension funds, down from 96 in 1980. Greater scale may strengthen the case for private debt allocation in the years ahead.
“Iceland’s CIO would reconsider private debt if the Ministry of Finance were to lift the unlisted investment ceiling. The policy conversation is live.”
Key Statistics at a Glance
| $1.7trn | Global private credit AUM (2025) |
| 49% | Global institutional investors planning to increase private credit |
| 119 | Private debt transactions in Sweden over the last four years |
| 15% | SH Pension’s private credit portfolio allocation |
| €10.4bn | CVC European Direct Lending Fund IV close (2025) |
| ~1% | Share of Norwegian corporate credit from NBFIs |
| 50% | New illiquid asset cap for Sweden’s AP2 post-reform |
| 20% | Iceland pension fund cap on unlisted securities |
Themes Across the Region
Several structural themes emerge from a pan-Nordic view of the private debt landscape.
Sweden is the Dominant Deal Market
In sheer volume of transactions, Sweden leads the Nordic region by a wide margin — accounting for close to half of all private credit deals across the five countries over the past four years. The combination of a large corporate sector, a robust legal framework, strong PE sponsor activity and now a reformed AP buffer fund system with higher illiquid asset ceilings makes Sweden a compelling jurisdiction for both lenders and institutional investors.
Denmark is the most institutionally advanced
While Sweden leads on transaction volume, Denmark’s pension funds have built the most sophisticated and differentiated institutional private debt programs. The combination of internal teams, direct investment capabilities, fund commitments and strong performance track records puts Denmark closest to the model of leading global private debt institutional investors such as Canada’s large pension funds or the Dutch occupational schemes.
Norway is structurally underweighted
The absence of private debt from the Government Pension Fund Global’s mandate, combined with the relative strength of Norwegian banks and a small NBFI lending market, means Norway lags materially behind its neighbours. AIFMD II may be the catalyst that begins to change this — but meaningful growth is likely to be measured in years rather than quarters.
Finland is on the cusp of a step-change
The pension reform underway in Finland has the potential to be genuinely transformative. Greater latitude to carry risk in portfolios, combined with a strong performance culture and increasing familiarity with private markets, sets the stage for Finnish pension funds to become far more active private credit allocators over the next three to five years.
Iceland is constrained — but watching
Legislative caps on unlisted securities remain the binding constraint in Iceland. But the policy debate is active, the sector is consolidating, and the appetite is demonstrably there. If the Ministry of Finance moves on the unlisted ceiling, Iceland could move quickly.
Conclusion
The Nordic private debt market is not a single story but five distinct ones — each shaped by its own regulatory environment, institutional culture and market structure. What unites them is direction of travel. From Stockholm to Reykjavik, institutional investors are increasingly convinced that private credit belongs in a well-diversified long-horizon portfolio, and the structural conditions — regulatory reform, strong deal pipelines, and a track record of competitive returns — are increasingly in place to support that conviction.
The pace of change is uneven. But for global managers seeking to raise capital from Nordic LPs, or for corporates looking for flexible financing from non-bank lenders, the message from this analysis is consistent: the Nordic institutional private debt market is open, growing, and increasingly sophisticated — and it is only getting started.
Sources: Deloitte Private Debt Deal Tracker Spring 2025 · Nuveen EQuilibrium Survey 2025 · Norges Bank Financial Stability Report 2025 · IPE Research · Forsikring & Pension (Danish Insurance & Pension) · Fund annual reports: AP2, Ilmarinen, Varma, Elo, Veritas, PensionDanmark · CVC Credit press releases
