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🚨THIS SECTOR COULD CAUSE THE NEXT FINANCIAL CRISIS
And even the Fed is concerned about it.
I'm talking about the private credit market, which is only getting worse.
In Q1 2026, $20 billion tried to exit private credit, but almost half of it could not get out.
That is how a liquidity crisis starts.
Private credit grew to $3.5 trillion by doing one thing banks stopped doing after 2008.
It lent money to riskier companies, charged higher interest, and told investors they could withdraw quarterly.
Money kept flowing in. Everyone was happy.
Now the money is trying to leave, and there's a limited exit.
In Q1 2026 investors requested over $20 billion in redemptions across the industry, the highest quarterly total ever recorded.
Funds did not meet those requests. Most capped withdrawals at 5% of assets and left the rest locked inside with no exit date.
This is not one fund having a bad quarter. This is happening everywhere at the same time.
BlackRock paid out $620 million of the $1.2 billion requested. Apollo received $1.6 billion in redemption requests and capped withdrawals.
Ares, Morgan Stanley, and Barings all did the same. The clearest sign of stress came from Blue Owl when investors tried to pull 41% of its entire technology fund in a single quarter.
Two quarters ago that number was 3%. Its $36 billion flagship fund saw 22% in withdrawal requests. Both funds are capped at 5%. The rest is locked.
The reason this is dangerous is simple. Investors were promised periodic liquidity. The underlying loans are not liquid.
These are private deals, hard to price and impossible to sell quickly at scale. So when everyone rushes to the exit at once, funds cannot raise cash fast enough.
They gate withdrawals instead. That is exactly what is happening right now across the entire sector.
The environment is also getting worse at the same time.
Borrowers in private credit are heavily leveraged. Interest rates are still at 3.5%. Energy costs are rising because of the Iran war.
Default rates have already hit 9.2%, the highest ever tracked in the industry.
The software and tech companies that make up 15% to 20% of most private credit portfolios are under pressure from AI disruption.
Fitch is warning defaults could reach 15%.
This is why the Federal Reserve has started asking banks about their exposure to private credit firms.
Japan's financial regulator is doing the same. The US Treasury has called emergency meetings with domestic and international insurance regulators about systemic risk in the sector.
The Bank of England Governor publicly warned it could trigger a 2008-style financial crisis.
For comparison, the subprime mortgage market that caused 2008 was $1.5 trillion.
Private credit today is $3.5 trillion. And unlike subprime mortgages, private credit is largely unregulated, prices its own assets internally, and does not trade on public markets.
Nobody outside these funds knows what the loans inside them are actually worth right now.
And that's how every major crisis has started.