redit to work in deals with contract-like cash flows. For DAE, it further legitimizes its “manager-for-hire” model – alongside its own roughly 700-aircraft fleet and a third-party portfolio of 100+ planes worth over $4 billion.
Why should I care?
For markets: Private credit is getting comfortable with airplanes.
When a $100 billion-plus asset-based platform backs leasing, it signals aviation finance is moving closer to mainstream infrastructure-style credit. But more money chasing a limited pool of jets can keep lease rates elevated, which may pressure airline margins and widen the gap between carriers that can lock in aircraft and those that can’t.
Zooming out: Aircraft shortages are changing who holds the power.
With supply tight, airlines are leaning more on lessors to expand fleets without huge upfront checks. That shifts bargaining power toward firms that can source aircraft and handle the operational headaches, effectively turning leasing platforms into gatekeepers of growth until manufacturing capacity catches up.
