- FSB Chair and Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey warned Thursday that private credit may finally be coming under stress for the first time, as the Iran war collision of market volatility collides with a sector never tested in a true economic downturn
- Bailey flagged a “double whammy” scenario: volatile markets destabilizing valuations at the same time investors lose confidence in private credit funds, potentially forcing mass redemptions and contagion into regulated banks
- The rush of retail investors into private credit has already slammed into reverse, with some managers imposing redemption gates; JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon warned of more “cockroaches” after the collapse of auto lender Tricolor Holdings and car-parts supplier First Brands Group
- The Bank of England is stress-testing major private lenders to assess resilience under a severe downturn; Bailey said there is “quite a bit of catch up to do” on transparency in these markets
What Happened?
Andrew Bailey, chair of the Financial Stability Board and governor of the Bank of England, issued one of his starkest warnings yet about private credit on Thursday, telling the European Parliament that the sector may finally be experiencing stress for the first time. The Iran war shock to global markets, combined with the rapid reversal of retail investor flows into private credit funds, has created conditions for a dangerous feedback loop. Bailey said: “Private credit is a relatively opaque world and it has not yet, because of its relative newness, actually come under stress, and we may be seeing that now.” The Bank of England is already running a stress test of major private lenders to gauge sector resilience under a severe downturn scenario.
Why It Matters?
Private credit has expanded from a niche post-crisis alternative into a $250+ trillion shadow banking ecosystem that grew precisely because tighter bank regulation pushed corporate borrowers outside public markets. The sector has never experienced a genuine credit cycle with widespread defaults, and regulators have long warned that its opacity and interconnections with regulated banks make it a potential vector for systemic risk. The Iran war has simultaneously destabilized markets and deepened retail investor anxiety, triggering redemption requests that some fund managers are now gating. Dimon’s warning about more “cockroaches” following the collapse of Tricolor and First Brands suggests defaults may already be quietly accumulating. Bailey drew an explicit parallel with the subprime debt crisis, warning that problems could spread rapidly from non-bank lenders into the regulated financial system.
What’s Next?
The Bank of England stress test results will be closely watched as one of the first rigorous official assessments of how private credit performs in adverse conditions. Bailey’s calls for greater transparency are likely to translate into regulatory proposals at both the FSB and national central bank levels. The critical near-term question is whether the Iran ceasefire stabilizes markets enough to halt the retail investor exodus, or whether redemption pressure continues to build to a point where more gates are imposed. If gates proliferate, the loss of confidence Bailey warned about could become self-fulfilling, making the next several weeks in private credit as consequential as anything playing out in public markets.
Source: Bloomberg












