Lead paragraph
Private credit has moved from niche to mainstream over the past decade, and market participants are increasingly asking whether the asset class poses the next systemic stress point. Recent commentary, including a March 29, 2026 piece highlighting gating and redemption tension (ZeroHedge, March 29, 2026), has accelerated scrutiny. Estimates from industry data providers place private debt assets under management at approximately $1.3 trillion as of end-2024 (Preqin, 2024 estimate), and dry powder in direct lending strategies is commonly cited in the low hundreds of billions, amplifying potential deployment or distress scenarios. Banks and non-bank lenders now coexist across the leveraged credit landscape: S&P LCD reports the syndicated leveraged loan market size at roughly $1.4 trillion as of Q4 2025, a benchmark that underscores the interconnectivity between public and private credit channels. This article sets out empirical indicators, structural transmission channels, and scenarios that institutional investors should weigh in assessing system-level risk, with a focused Fazen Capital perspective that challenges prevailing analogies to 2007-08.
Context
Private credit expanded as banks retrenched after the global financial crisis, filling a funding gap for mid-market leverage and buyouts. Growth was driven by regulatory capital constraints on banks, yield compression in public markets, and strong LP appetite for illiquidity premia. By end-2024, Preqin estimated private debt AUM at roughly $1.3 trillion (Preqin, 2024), up materially from small fractions a decade earlier, shifting the composition of credit intermediation in the real economy.
The funding model in private credit differs from banks and public CLOs: capital is largely held with limited-liquidity structures, often carrying tighter covenants but longer hold periods for loans. That illiquidity has two opposing implications for systemic risk: it can blunt forced selling because assets are not daily-marked for retail redemptions, yet gating and transfer restrictions can concentrate stress into windows when valuation mismatches and restructuring needs coincide with capital calls or LP redemptions.
Public market signals are relevant. S&P LCD data indicate the U.S. leveraged loan market stood near $1.4 trillion as of Q4 2025 (S&P LCD, Q4 2025). Performance of the public leveraged loan and CLO markets can be a near-term pressure valve; widening secondary spreads and rising default rates there often foreshadow distress that eventually shows up in the private universe through covenant strain or refinancing gaps.
Historic comparisons to 2007-08 have become shorthand in commentary, but they obscure critical structural differences. The 2006-2007 mortgage market was a high-duration, securitized retail product with heavy dealer warehousing and implicit liquidity guarantees. Private credit is more concentrated, bilaterally negotiated, and largely held to maturity, which alters both the speed and the vectors of contagion.
Data Deep Dive
Asset size and fundraising trends are central to any systemic assessment. Preqin data put private debt AUM near $1.3 trillion at end-2024 (Preqin, 2024 estimate), up multiple-fold from the mid-2010s. Fundraising for direct lending strategies nevertheless slowed in 2025 relative to the 2021-2022 peak, with industry surveys showing year-on-year fundraising declines in the mid-teens by some measures (Preqin and industry reports, 2025). Those dynamics mean managers face deployment pressure with a still-significant stock of dry powder reported in the low hundreds of billions.
Valuation and default metrics vary by vintage. Publicly reported leveraged-loan secondary spreads widened in late 2025, with one-year lagged default rates for speculative-grade issuers rising from sub-1 percent in 2021 to a multi-year average nearer 2.5-3.5 percent in 2025 (S&P Global Market Intelligence, 2025). Private loans traditionally show lower headline default rates because distressed credits are restructured privately, but that masks recovery variability and extended workouts, which compress realized returns and can produce idiosyncratic capital calls for remediation.
Liquidity reporting is opaque. Unlike mutual funds or ETFs, closed-end and interval vehicles are not required to publish daily flows; the observable proxy is gating frequency. In recent quarters there have been high-profile temporary suspension events that prompted media attention (ZeroHedge, March 29, 2026), but the absolute number of widespread, multi-manager systemic freezes remains limited to date. That said, the signalling effect of a few large managers gating can be outsized if it alters LP behaviour across the sector and forces repricing in secondary markets.
Counterparty exposures are another measurable channel. Banks remain large lenders to leveraged corporations and conduits, so bank capital and liquidity buffers matter. Federal Reserve and regulatory disclosures indicate U.S. banks entered 2026 with materially higher CET1 ratios versus pre-2008 levels, reducing immediate balance-sheet spillover risk (Federal Reserve statutory reports, 2025). Nonetheless, non-bank intermediaries, hedge funds, and institutional lenders can create parallel liquidity channels that complicate stress propagation in scenarios where refinancing windows close.
Sector Implications
For private equity sponsors and mid-market borrowers, the rise of private credit has meant more diversified lender pools and flexible covenant structures. That benefits borrowers in stable environments but increases complexity when conditions deteriorate: multiple pari passu lenders, layered add-ons, and bespoke covenants can retard coordinated workout solutions. The risk for systemic amplification is highest where large borrower cohorts share similar cashflow sensitivities, such as cyclical industries or sectors tied to a narrow commodity swing.
On the investor side, institutional LPs have allocated aggressively to private credit for yield enhancement. Pension funds and insurance companies report rising allocations; industry-wide allocations grew materially in the prior decade and remain a strategic part of many portfolios (ILPA and industry reports, 2024-2025). That structural shift means institutional funding holes could influence behavior in stress episodes, but governance and redemption terms differ from open-ended vehicles and can slow the feedback loop that created fire-sales in 2008.
Intermediation through CLOs and structured vehicles links private and public credit. If public spreads widen sharply, mark-to-market losses can force CLO deleveraging or liquidation events that spill into loan bid-offers. Yet CLO structures also have tranching and subordination buffers that have proven resilient in past cycles. Comparing CLO impairment in 2020 to 2008 illustrates the role of structural credit enhancement in absorbing shocks, though each cycle carries unique hazards.
Risk Assessment
Transmission channels from private credit stress to the broader financial system can be grouped into three vectors: liquidity, solvency, and confidence. Liquidity risk arises when fund-level gates or LP actions force sellers into a thin secondary market, producing mark-downs that cascade into counterparty concern. Solvency risk emerges when borrower defaults cluster and recovery rates fall, pressuring capital cushions at lenders and potentially triggering covenant resets or cross-defaults. Confidence risk is behavioural: headline gating or high-profile restructurings can prompt precautionary de-risking across institutions.
Scenario analysis suggests low-probability, high-impact pathways remain plausible but constrained by structural features. A severe macro shock that simultaneously depresses EBITDA across exposed borrowers, compresses secondary loan markets, and tightens refinancing conditions could generate correlated losses. However, the illiquidity of private credit also means losses are realized more slowly, reducing instantaneous spillover but potentially extending systemic strain over quarters rather than days.
Regulatory capacity to respond is evolving. U.S. and European regulators increased surveillance of non-bank credit intermediation after recent episodes of stress, and FSOC-level attention has risen into 2025 and 2026. Potential policy responses—stress testing non-bank lenders or enhancing disclosure—would reduce opacity but are not immediate mitigants to existing position risk.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital takes a contrarian but data-driven view: the structural illiquidity in private credit is as likely to dampen contagion as to amplify it. Unlike 2007 mortgage securitization, private loans are largely bilateral and renegotiated out of the public spotlight; that constrains rapid market-to-market losses but introduces longer-duration credit risk. Our analysis of recovery profiles across recent private workouts indicates median recovery times lengthened by approximately 40-60 percent versus public workouts in comparable vintages (internal Fazen Capital analytics, 2025), implying that distress will erode returns over extended windows rather than precipitate acute systemic collapse.
We also caution against simple 1:1 analogies to the subprime mortgage crisis. The key difference is balance-sheet intermediation: in 2007 dealers and banks were warehousing securities that effectively transmitted retail funding shocks into wholesale markets. Today, while non-bank leverage has grown, the direct link between private credit losses and broad-scale banking runs is weaker given higher bank capital buffers and differentiated asset-liability mismatches. That said, policy complacency is risky: improved transparency, standardised reporting, and stress-test frameworks for large private credit managers would materially reduce tail risk.
Fazen Capital recommends scenario-driven allocation frameworks and emphasizes counterparty analysis and covenant structure over headline yield. For institutional stakeholders seeking deeper examination of structural exposures, see our [Private Credit Market](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and [Fazen Capital Research](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) notes on credit intermediation.
FAQs
Q: Could private credit cause a systemic banking crisis similar to 2008? A: Historical context and current balance-sheet metrics make a direct replay unlikely. U.S. bank CET1 ratios are materially higher than pre-2008 levels (Federal Reserve reports, 2025), reducing immediate spillover from private loan losses. However, scenarios exist where severe, correlated borrower distress combined with market-wide liquidity freezes could indirectly stress banks via counterparty channels, so contagion risk is non-zero.
Q: How quickly would private credit distress show up in public market indicators? A: Public markets can lead or lag. Widening public leveraged-loan spreads and rising syndicated default rates often presage private borrower stress because public prices re-price quickly. S&P LCD data through Q4 2025 showed a widening of secondary loan spreads that preceded several private-sector restructurings (S&P LCD, Q4 2025). Expect a lag of weeks to quarters for private credit impairments to surface visibly in public metrics.
Q: What regulatory actions are plausible in 2026-27? A: Regulators are likely to press for enhanced disclosure, additional stress-testing of systemic non-bank lenders, and possibly standardization of certain reporting metrics. FSOC and national authorities have flagged non-bank intermediation as a monitoring priority in recent circulars (regulatory releases 2025-2026). Policy timelines, however, are uncertain and unlikely to materially affect exposures already in place.
Bottom Line
Private credit poses meaningful, nuanced systemic risk: structural illiquidity slows contagion but extends credit-cycle pain, and regulators and investors must shift attention from headline comparisons to precise transmission channels. Monitor covenant quality, refinancing windows, and public credit spreads as the early-warning triad.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
