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- Global regulators
warned private credit is creating rising systemic risks
- The Financial
Stability Board cited growing defaults and weak transparency concerns
- Links between banks,
insurers, asset managers, and private equity firms are deepening
- Retail investor
exposure to private credit has risen sharply over the past decade
- Regulators fear
liquidity mismatches in semi-liquid and open-ended products
- Major firms including
BlackRock and Apollo have recently restricted redemptions
The world’s financial regulators are
warning that the explosive growth of private credit is creating new
vulnerabilities across the global financial system as banks, insurers, private
equity firms, and asset managers become increasingly interconnected through the
sector.
In a new report titled
“Vulnerabilities in Private Credit,” the Financial Stability Board warned that
signs of stress are beginning to emerge within the fast-growing market,
including rising defaults, deteriorating underwriting standards, and growing
concerns over transparency.
Private credit, which typically
involves non-bank lenders providing financing to mid-sized companies, has
expanded rapidly since the 2007 – 2009 financial crisis as tighter banking
regulations pushed more lending activity outside traditional banking channels.
The Financial Stability Board
estimated the global private credit market was worth between $1.5 trillion and
$2 trillion in 2024, although industry groups place the figure substantially
higher.
“The private credit ecosystem is
increasingly characterised by deepening interconnections between asset
managers, banks, insurers and private equity firms,” said John Schindler.
Schindler warned that although
headline default rates remain moderate, broader indicators of stress are
becoming more concerning.
“Default rates, though still
moderate, are rising,” he said. “When we include broader measures, such as
selective defaults and distressed exchanges, the picture becomes more
concerning.”
The warning comes amid mounting
investor concerns following several high-profile borrower failures in both the
United States and Britain, which have exposed weaknesses in underwriting
quality and risk controls within parts of the private credit sector.
This week, HSBC disclosed an
unexpected $400 million loss linked to the collapse of British mortgage lender
Market Financial Solutions, adding to concerns over the sector’s growing
fragility.
While the FSB noted that direct bank
exposure to private credit remains relatively limited at less than 0.5% of
total banking assets, regulators warned that indirect exposure across the
broader financial ecosystem is becoming increasingly complex.
Writing separately in the Financial
Times, Andrew Bailey said the growing web of financial connections deserves
closer scrutiny.
“These multiple layers of leverage
across the ecosystem deserve deeper scrutiny,” Bailey wrote.
One of the watchdog’s biggest
concerns is the rapid “retailisation” of private credit markets, particularly
in the United States, where private credit products are increasingly being
marketed to wealthy retail investors rather than institutional buyers alone.
According to the FSB, retail
investors’ share of private credit assets under management has risen from
almost zero to approximately 13% over the past decade.
Regulators fear that the increasing
popularity of open-ended and semi-liquid investment structures could create
dangerous liquidity mismatches because investors may be allowed to redeem funds
periodically while the underlying loans remain long-dated and illiquid.
Several major investment firms,
including KKR, Apollo Global Management, BlackRock and Blue Owl Capital, have
recently limited investor redemptions from private credit products amid rising
withdrawal requests.
The FSB also highlighted growing
concentration risk within the industry, noting that five large asset managers
now account for roughly one-third of total loan commitments across both private
credit and private equity markets.
Connections between private credit
and the insurance sector are also intensifying. The watchdog estimated that
approximately 10% of life insurers’ portfolios are now invested in private
credit compared with roughly 3% for non-life insurers.
Regulators are now calling for
greater transparency, stronger data collection, improved liquidity oversight,
and better coordination of supervisory practices globally as they seek to
prevent stress within private credit markets from spreading more broadly across
the financial system.
Although regulators stopped short of
describing private credit as an immediate systemic threat, the report signals
growing concern that the sector’s rapid growth may be outpacing the ability of
both investors and supervisors to fully understand the risks building beneath
the surface.