--- title: "With bad debts looming, Apollo's private credit fund is forced to lower its valuation" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/277203603.md" description: "The collapse of the UK lending institution MFS has triggered a credit crisis, as it is suspected of \"double pledging\" fraud, leading Wall Street giants such as Barclays and Apollo to face significant risk exposure. As a result, Jefferies' stock price plummeted nearly 10%, and Apollo was forced to write down its valuation and cut its dividend, exacerbating market concerns about credit risk" datetime: "2026-02-27T13:23:44.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/277203603.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277203603.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/277203603.md) --- # With bad debts looming, Apollo's private credit fund is forced to lower its valuation The risk of bad debts in the credit market continues to ferment, and a series of high-profile corporate default events have raised heightened vigilance on Wall Street. In the wake of the recent collapse of a non-bank financial institution in the UK, private credit giants have been affected, with funds under Apollo Global Management forced to lower valuations and cut dividends. According to a previous article by Wall Street Watch, the UK lending institution Market Financial Solutions (MFS) recently collapsed and entered the UK bankruptcy management process. Court documents show that internal entities of the institution accused it of "serious violations" and a "significant shortfall" in collateral, leading to substantial potential losses for several Wall Street giants that provided financing. This event quickly triggered a chain reaction in the capital markets, with related financial institutions' stock prices plummeting. Jefferies Financial Group's stock price fell nearly 9.8%, while Apollo's stock price dropped by 4.7%. Additionally, the stock prices of Barclays Bank and Santander Bank also declined after the opening, with decreases of 3.8% and 1.7%, respectively. Widespread credit anxiety is spreading in the financial circle. Against this backdrop, a business development company (BDC) supervised by Apollo has lowered its quarterly dividend and written down its portfolio valuation by about 3%. This move further exacerbates investors' concerns about the overall health of the credit market. ## **Giants Deep in Risk Exposure** MFS was established in 2006 and is led by CEO Paresh Raja. It is a non-bank financial company that provides "complex, real estate-backed loans." The company primarily offers bridge loans to clients, with its funding heavily reliant on support from Wall Street institutions. At the peak of its business prosperity, MFS's loan scale once reached £2.4 billion. With the collapse of MFS, the Wall Street giants that provided funding are deeply entangled. According to Bloomberg, a judge stated at the bankruptcy management hearing that Barclays alone has about £600 million of funds linked to MFS. Apollo's Atlas SP Partners indicated its risk exposure is approximately £400 million. Additionally, sources revealed to the media that Jefferies' risk exposure is about £100 million. Wells Fargo & Co. and Castlelake LP have also been caught up in this situation ## **Allegations of Double Pledging and Fund Transfer** The core issue leading to the rapid collapse of MFS lies in potential fraud allegations. Internal entities pushing the company into bankruptcy proceedings indicated in court documents that December of last year was a turning point, as MFS allegedly transferred "most or even all" of the revenues from certain transactions, with the funds' whereabouts unknown. **Furthermore, the documents accuse MFS of applying for loans from different lenders using the same assets, a practice known as "double pledging."** In response to these allegations, MFS attributed the issues to a "stalemate that temporarily restricted our use of daily banking facilities." Paresh Raja stated that the current situation does not reflect a failure of the underlying business or asset quality. Currently, relevant authorities have not charged anyone with wrongdoing. Nicole Byrns, founder of Dumar Capital Partners, pointed out that **the market has been discussing how to prevent fraud for the past six months, but this incident indicates that the ability to identify such behavior may still have weaknesses.** ## **Crisis Signs Trigger Wall Street Alert** The collapse of MFS is not an isolated incident; its pattern is similar to that of recent troubled U.S. auto loan company Tricolor Holdings and auto parts supplier First Brands Group, putting significant pressure on major banks to write down assets. This series of events has raised significant alarm among financial leaders. JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon warned that **he is beginning to see similarities between today's market and the pre-2008 financial crisis era, noting "seeing some people doing foolish things."** In the broader private credit sector, tensions are also evident. Previously, Blue Owl Capital decided to suspend quarterly redemptions for one of its retail funds, triggering a sell-off of asset management company stocks. Marathon Asset Management Chairman Bruce Richards likened the dangers facing the market to "a train coming at you that you can see from a distance," bluntly stating that "the market has just woken up." ## Related News & Research - [LIVE MARKETS-Everything must go: ADP, services PMI, factory orders, mortgage demand](https://longbridge.com/en/news/288600845.md) - [BREAKINGVIEWS-Anthropic IPO could train a large M&A model](https://longbridge.com/en/news/288571803.md) - [Cisco And Palo Alto Could Be Major Winners From Anthropic's Mythos AI, According To Jim Cramer](https://longbridge.com/en/news/288559511.md) - [Trump's New AI Clock Starts Ticking: Will Microsoft, Oracle Or Palantir Become 'Trusted Partners'?](https://longbridge.com/en/news/288612267.md) - [ANALYSIS-High-profile Meta AI chatbot breach spotlights security risks of automation](https://longbridge.com/en/news/288554153.md)