Market snapshot
Published: March 12, 2026
The S&P 500 financial-services sector is the worst performer in the index this week and has fallen to its lowest level since May 2025. A toxic mix of climbing bond yields and a broadening panic about the stability of private-credit lenders has driven heavy selling across both alternative asset managers and large banks.
What happened
- Climbing Treasury and corporate bond yields have increased mark-to-market pressure on fixed-income holdings and raised funding costs for lenders.
- Redemptions at private-credit and alternative-lending vehicles have accelerated, prompting some managers to restrict withdrawals and increase liquidity buffers.
- Geopolitical tensions tied to the Iran conflict have coincided with redemption flows, adding to market volatility and risk-off positioning.
Names in focus
Alternative asset managers and private-credit platforms have come under particular pressure: Blue Owl (OWL), Blackstone (BX) and KKR (KKR). Large universal and investment banks have also seen notable weakness: Morgan Stanley (MS), JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and Goldman Sachs (GS). The listing of ETA among tickers signals attention to additional industry participants.
Why bond yields matter for financial stocks
- Rising bond yields reduce the market value of existing fixed-income assets held on bank and manager balance sheets, creating immediate mark-to-market losses for trading and available-for-sale portfolios.
- Higher yields increase funding costs for leveraged strategies common in private-credit structures and for banks funding wholesale and repo books.
- Yield volatility also stresses liquidity models: stress-tested cash needs expand, and asset managers face tougher decisions when investors seek redemptions.
Why private-credit redemptions matter
- Private-credit vehicles are typically less liquid than public markets; accelerated redemption requests can force managers to gate funds, sell assets at discounts, or rely on short-term financing.
- Redemption pressure creates valuation uncertainty for illiquid loan portfolios, complicating NAV calculations and investor confidence.
- When multiple managers limit redemptions, market participants reprice counterparty and liquidity risk across the sector, amplifying stock selloffs for fund sponsors and lenders.
Market implications and transmission channels
- Equity: Stocks of firms that rely heavily on fee-based asset management and private-credit origination (OWL, BX, KKR) can see outsized declines when redemption stories dominate headlines.
- Banking sector: Major banks (MS, JPM, GS) can be affected through trading losses, higher credit costs, and weaker capital markets activity amid risk-off periods.
- Funding and liquidity: Short-term funding spreads and repo rates are variables to monitor as they signal market stress and the cost of covering liquidity gaps.
Key metrics and indicators to monitor
- Treasury yields and term structure: direction and speed of moves in 2-year and 10-year rates
- Private-credit fund gating announcements and redemption notices
- Short-term funding spreads and repo market conditions
- Credit spreads for leveraged loans and high-yield corporate debt
- Mark-to-market adjustments in quarterly NAVs disclosed by alternative asset managers
Practical considerations for traders and institutional investors
- Distinguish between structural credit risk and liquidity-driven markdowns: illiquidity can temporarily depress prices without reflecting permanent defaults.
- Stress-test portfolios for rate-driven valuation declines and heightened funding costs rather than only headline-driven volatility.
- Re-evaluate exposure to fee-dependent asset managers versus banks with large deposit franchises and diversified earnings streams.
- Consider hedges that target duration exposure and equity downside in the financial sector, while keeping counterparty and basis risk in focus.
Short-term outlook
The interaction of rising yields and private-credit redemption stress creates a risk-amplifying feedback loop: rising yields reduce asset valuations, which can trigger redemptions, which in turn require liquidity actions that depress valuations further. Market attention will center on whether redemptions normalize or broaden, and whether bond yields stabilize.
Bottom line
A combination of climbing bond yields and liquidity stress in private-credit vehicles has pushed the S&P 500 financial-services sector to its weakest level since May 2025. Alternative asset managers including Blue Owl (OWL), Blackstone (BX) and KKR (KKR) are experiencing concentrated pressure, and major banks such as Morgan Stanley (MS), JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and Goldman Sachs (GS) are trading under heightened risk-off conditions. Institutional investors should monitor redemption flows, funding spreads and Treasury yields as the primary indicators of whether the episode will be contained or broaden into a deeper sector-wide adjustment.
