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Glossary · MCA funder portfolio fund vintage — detailed

MCA funder portfolio fund vintage — detailed

A fund's vintage is the calendar year its capital was committed and first deployed; in MCA, vintage drives returns more than manager skill because pricing, default cycles, and securitization spreads are macro-determined. (Updated 2026-06-28.)

By Keerthana Keti5 min read

Fund vintage refers to the year a closed-end MCA credit fund first calls capital and begins deploying it into receivables. In private credit broadly — and in MCA specifically — vintage is among the strongest predictors of realized fund returns, often outweighing manager-level differences in underwriting skill.

Why vintage matters so much in MCA. - Deployment pricing is set by market conditions. A 2021-vintage fund deployed into 1.18–1.25 factor rates; a 2024-vintage fund deployed into 1.32–1.42. The deployment-pricing delta alone can swing gross IRR by 600–900 bps. - Default cycles are macro-driven. Funds that deployed heavily in 2019–20 hit COVID defaults; funds that deployed in 2023–24 are hitting the 2025–26 SMB stress cycle. - Securitization spreads vary by vintage year. A 2022-vintage fund's ABS issuance cleared at 425 bps over benchmark; a 2024-vintage equivalent cleared at 575 bps — directly compressing LP net returns. - Capital-call timing. A fund that calls capital across 2024–26 captures three different deployment environments, smoothing vintage risk.

Vintage performance summary (MCA closed-end credit funds, 2026 data).

VintageNet IRR (median)Net IRR (top quartile)Net DPI at year 4Notes
201811–13%16–19%0.85–1.05Hit by COVID; recovery vintage
20199–12%14–18%0.75–0.95Worst vintage; full COVID exposure
202014–17%20–24%1.10–1.35Post-COVID re-pricing benefited returns
202112–15%17–21%0.95–1.20Compressed factor rates muted IRR
202215–18%21–26%1.05–1.30Strongest recent vintage; rising-rate tailwind
202316–20%22–28%TBDEarly markings strong; defaults emerging
202417–22% (est.)23–30% (est.)TBDHigh factor rates; uncertain default outcome
2025TBDTBDTBDMid-deployment

Vintage exposure inside a single funder's balance sheet. Even balance-sheet funders (not closed-end funds) carry implicit vintage exposure. A funder originating $400M/year holds receivables across 18–24 months of vintages at any time. The 2024 vintage on a 2026 balance sheet faces full default emergence by 2027.

Why LPs care about vintage diversification. Sophisticated MCA LPs build vintage-laddered allocations — committing $25M each year across 5+ years rather than $125M in one vintage. This smooths the cycle-driven IRR dispersion that single-vintage funds suffer.

Common vintage misconceptions. - "Vintage doesn't matter in short-duration assets like MCA." False. Even with 9–12 month average duration, macro shifts during the 18–24 month deployment window dominate returns. - "Manager skill overcomes vintage." Partially true — top-quartile managers in bad vintages still outperform bottom-quartile in good vintages — but vintage usually explains more variance than alpha. - "All 2022-vintage MCA funds did well." False. Funds that deployed into trucking and over-the-road freight in mid-2022 were hit by the 2023 freight recession.

The 2026 vintage outlook. - 2024 vintage: likely top-quartile if defaults remain at 2025 trajectory. - 2025 vintage: uncertain — high pricing offset by elevated SMB stress. - 2026 vintage: early markers positive; CA/NY disclosure laws creating moat for compliant funders.

Takeaway. When evaluating an MCA fund, ask: what is the deployment-year-weighted vintage? Funds raising in 2026 but deploying steadily through 2028 will avoid single-vintage concentration risk.

Related terms

  • MCA funder fund vintage impactFund vintage (the year capital was first deployed) materially affects MCA fund returns: 2020–2021 vintages benefited from COVID stimulus tailwinds; 2024–2025 vintages face tighter credit and higher defaults; 2026 vintages are positioned for the next cycle peak.
  • MCA funder portfolio LP economics — detailedLP economics in a 2026 MCA credit fund typically deliver 11–16% net IRR, 1.4–1.7× net TVPI, and 1.3–1.6× net DPI by year 5 after 2% management fee and 20% carry over an 8% preferred return. (Updated 2026-06-28.)
  • MCA funder portfolio GP economics — detailedGP economics in a 2026 MCA credit fund combine 1.5–2% management fees, 20% carry above an 8% hurdle, and 2–5% GP commitment; total GP take across a fund cycle averages 18–28% of gross profits. (Updated 2026-06-28.)
  • MCA funder portfolio IRR typical — 2026Typical 2026 MCA credit fund net IRR is 12–14% (median) and 16–19% (top quartile); gross IRR before fees is 18–22% (median) and 23–28% (top quartile). (Updated 2026-06-28.)
  • MCA funder portfolio vintage year impactVintage year drives 50–70% of variance in MCA fund net IRR; 2020 and 2022 vintages produced top-quartile returns, 2019 was the worst vintage in the modern MCA era due to COVID default emergence. (Updated 2026-06-28.)

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