- Goldman CEO David Solomon acknowledged on Q1 earnings call that private credit “has been an area of increased focus” and said “there’s going to continue to be some noise around the retail space”
- Solomon insisted Goldman itself faces few issues in private credit and continues to view it as an attractive asset class — a notably more confident posture than some peers have taken publicly
- Goldman’s stock traders posted a second consecutive quarterly record, providing a strong earnings backdrop from which Solomon addressed private credit concerns
- The comments come as Bank of England Governor Bailey warned the Iran war is compounding private credit stress, and managers from Oaktree to BlackRock have been downplaying their own exposure
What Happened?
Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon used the firm’s Q1 earnings call to directly address mounting investor anxiety about private credit. Solomon acknowledged the sector “has been an area of increased focus in recent months” and conceded there will “continue to be some noise around the retail space.” But he drew a sharp distinction between industry-level concern and Goldman’s specific position, saying the firm has few issues in private credit and continues to see the asset class as attractive. The comments came as Goldman reported a second consecutive quarterly record for its stock trading desk, giving Solomon unusually firm ground from which to project confidence.
Why It Matters?
Solomon’s careful framing — acknowledging the noise while insisting Goldman is insulated — reflects a pattern playing out across the industry. Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey recently warned the Iran war is compounding private credit stress, pointing to floating-rate structures that expose borrowers to elevated rates precisely when revenues are under pressure. Every major player is working to reassure investors that the sector’s problems belong to someone else. The retail space is the specific pressure point Solomon flagged: non-traded BDCs and interval funds have seen elevated redemption requests as retail investors, unable to mark assets to market in real time, move on lagged signals. That redemption pressure can force asset sales at distressed valuations, creating a negative feedback loop that eventually reaches even the best-insulated books.
What’s Next?
Private credit stress is unfolding in slow motion — the asset class marks quarterly at best, meaning the full impact of the Iran war on portfolio company revenue and debt coverage ratios will not be visible for months. Solomon’s calm tone may prove well-founded if ceasefire diplomacy produces a deal and energy prices normalize. But if the conflict extends into Q3, the cumulative pressure on floating-rate private credit borrowers — many of them software and middle-market companies already under margin strain — will become increasingly difficult to talk around. Retail fund redemption dynamics will be the most visible early warning signal to watch.
Source: Bloomberg











