Skip to main content
JP Morgan Asset Management - Home
  • Products
    Overview

    Funds

    • Performance & Yields
    • Liquidity
    • Ultra-Short
    • Short Duration

    Solutions

    • Empower Share Class
    • Academy Securities
    • Cash Segmentation
    • Separately Managed Accounts
    • Managed Reserves Strategy
    • Capitalizing on Prime Money Market Funds
  • Insights
    Overview

    Liquidity Insights

    • Liquidity Insights Overview
    • Global Liquidity Investment Outlook
    • Tokenization
    • Case Studies
    • Partnership with fintechs
    • Leveraging the Power of Cash Segmentation
    • Cash Investment Policy Statement

    Market Insights

    • Market Insights Overview
    • Eye on the Market
    • Guide to the Markets
    • Market Updates

    Portfolio Insights

    • Portfolio Insights Overview
    • Currency
    • Fixed Income
    • Long-Term Capital Market Assumptions
    • Sustainable investing
    • Strategic Investment Advisory Group
  • Resources
    Overview
    • MORGAN MONEY
    • Account Management & Trading
    • Global Liquidity Investment Academy
    • Announcements
  • About us
    Overview
    • Diversity, Opportunity & Inclusion
    • Spectrum: Our Investment Platform
    • Sustainable and social investing
    • Our Leadership Team
  • Contact us
  • English
  • Role
  • Country
MORGAN MONEY LOGIN
Search
Menu
Search
You are about to leave the site Close
J.P. Morgan Asset Management’s website and/or mobile terms, privacy and security policies don't apply to the site or app you're about to visit. Please review its terms, privacy and security policies to see how they apply to you. J.P. Morgan Asset Management isn’t responsible for (and doesn't provide) any products, services or content at this third-party site or app, except for products and services that explicitly carry the J.P. Morgan Asset Management name.
CONTINUE Go Back

The strongest software businesses have defensible characteristics that extend well beyond their codebase.

Software stocks in early February experienced an abrupt and indiscriminate sell-off. Advances in AI code generation raised questions about the durability of the competitive moats of SaaS or software-as-a-service businesses.

This development matters for alternatives investors too because technology companies represent one of the larger sector exposures in both private equity and private credit portfolios. Investors reviewing sector composition charts like the one below in our Q1 Guide to Alternatives are now asking: what does this mean for private market allocations?

What triggered the sell-off?

A wave of product launches from major AI companies in early 2026 demonstrated that agentic tools could autonomously handle complex multi-step workflows: legal research, financial analysis, even writing software code. Software stocks, many trading at elevated multiples, sold off as investors reassessed the sustainability of these business models.

The S&P BDC index, which tracks publicly traded business development companies and is a bellwether for sentiment on private credit, dropped to its lowest value this year to date on February 5, coincident with the public market software sell-off as investors trimmed their exposure to private credit funds with software exposures.

Where does software figure in private markets?

Software has been a mainstay of private equity investment strategies, valued for its recurring revenue, high margins and perceived stickiness. In private credit, technology loans make up a significant share of portfolios.

The true exposure of private market funds to software is hard to pin down – classification methodologies vary across lenders, and a software company serving healthcare can be characterized as healthcare at one fund and technology in another, obscuring the actual concentration risk.

But software businesses are more than their code. The most aggressive bear case holds that AI-generated code will allow cheaper competitors to displace established software businesses. This view can sell short what makes enterprise software valuable.

The strongest software businesses have defensible characteristics that extend well beyond their codebase: deep customer relationships and established distribution networks, workflow integration that creates high switching costs and decades of proprietary data.

To lean into AI or diversify out of it?

This episode illustrates how interconnected public and private markets have become and underscores the importance of evaluating sector exposure across portfolios. It also highlights the value that active managers can bring in diligence and allocation decisions across the liquidity spectrum.

AI is among the most consequential technological shifts in a generation and much of the innovation is happening in private markets. Venture-backed companies are at the forefront of building the foundational models and tools. For investors seeking direct exposure to the AI opportunity, venture capital is where many of the future leaders will emerge.

For investors wary of AI disruption, investing in AI enablers such as private infrastructure is a way to gain differentiated exposure to the theme. Infrastructure funds which provide long-term power contracts to data centers and consumers alike can offer upside from AI's growth trajectory along with consistent income, lower volatility and less direct exposure to technology risk.

d1912fc4-0c3c-11f1-95ab-a56ff6e22e70
  • Markets
  • Alternatives
  • Private credit
  • Private equity
  • Infrastructure
J.P. Morgan Asset Management

  • Investment stewardship
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookie policy
  • Sitemap
  • Accessibility
J.P. Morgan

  • J.P. Morgan
  • JPMorgan Chase
  • Chase

READ IMPORTANT LEGAL INFORMATION. Legal Disclaimer >

The value of investments may go down as well as up and investors may not get back the full amount invested.

Copyright 2026 JPMorgan Chase & Co. All rights reserved.