--- title: "AI Is Igniting Private Credit; This Time, It's More Complex Than 2008" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/282590739.md" description: "Private credit stress is mounting: high exposure to software stocks, looming debt maturities, and surging redemptions. The Federal Reserve and Treasury Department have launched emergency assessments, while major banks like JPMorgan Chase prepare shorting tools via a private credit CDS index. UBS warns that if a private credit crisis erupts, the worst-case scenario could trigger a global financial crisis" datetime: "2026-04-13T21:05:00.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/282590739.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282590739.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/282590739.md) --- # AI Is Igniting Private Credit; This Time, It's More Complex Than 2008 The AI shock is pushing the private credit industry to the brink of a systemic crisis. **Concentrated software exposure, surging redemptions, and inflated valuations** have collectively built a wall of risk that could collapse at any moment—its fall would ripple through banks, insurers, and even the entire public credit market. **The Federal Reserve has launched an inquiry into banks' risk exposure to private credit, while the U.S. Treasury Department is simultaneously assessing the insurance sector.** This represents the strongest signal yet from regulators, indicating their urgent effort to evaluate the potential scale of this crisis spreading into the broader financial system. Meanwhile, according to The Wall Street Journal, **major banks like JPMorgan Chase are collaborating with S&P Global to launch a new private credit credit default swap index product (CDX Financials), allowing investors to go long or short on this $3 trillion+ industry with lower capital requirements.** From redemption stampedes to regulatory intervention, from large institutions positioning for short sales to the emergence of new derivative instruments, the intensity and complexity of the private credit crisis are accelerating—and the true impact may not yet be here. ## **Redemption Wave Pushes Industry to the Brink of Collapse** This crisis had warning signs. Following the initial sell-off triggered by market turmoil over "reciprocal tariffs," bad news followed in rapid succession. In summer 2025, First Brands and Tricolor collapsed, sparking panic searches for more "cockroaches" and driving sharp declines in publicly traded Business Development Company (BDC) stock prices. By 2026, software companies dominated holdings in private credit funds, heavily impacted by AI developments, triggering a second, more destructive wave of BDC and private credit stock crashes. Currently, nearly all assets in this sector recorded deep losses in 2026, having turned negative compared to early 2025 levels. **Redemption pressure has reached critical levels.** Reports indicate that 41% of investors in Blue Owl's Technology Income fund submitted redemption requests, with 22% of investors in Blue Owl Credit Income following suit. Redemption applications from top firms including Blackstone, Ares, Apollo, Oaktree, and KKR have far exceeded the statutory quarterly cap of 5%. Even Blackstone's own employees were forced to contribute $150 million personally to cover redemption gaps in its $82 billion private credit fund, BCRE. David Rosen, a former Point72 fund manager, had previously predicted this scenario. In a letter to investors, he wrote: once a fund begins cutting redemptions proportionally, "the entire sector's redemption queue will expand dramatically, and since funds cannot liquidate assets, liquidity will become extremely scarce." ## **AI Shock and Debt Maturities Trigger Double Explosion** The root of the crisis lies in structural fragility on the asset side. According to Barclays statistics, **software/SaaS loans represent the largest single industry exposure in BDC portfolios, with their share rising steadily since 2019.** The breakthrough progress of AI tools over the past 18 months has transformed this concentration risk from latent to explicit. More critically, numerous debt maturities are approaching. Over $200 billion in high-yield bonds and leveraged loans related to technology will mature before 2028, with a significant portion linked to companies held in private markets. According to PitchBook LCD data, **approximately $20.6 billion in software-related debt held by BDCs will mature in 2028, followed by another $21.4 billion in the subsequent 12 months.** Capital markets advisor Lincoln International notes that among direct lenders' borrowers, about 6.4% rolled interest payments through new debt in the fourth quarter to mask cash flow pressures—a sharp increase from 2.5% at the end of 2021. Barclays analysis indicates that within the entire BDC system, a median decline of just 21% in asset values would trigger the asset coverage ratio test threshold. Once crossed, the BDC structure faces systemic disintegration. ## **Opacity and Valuation Distortions Seed Trust Crisis** The acceleration of the crisis is closely tied to long-standing opacity issues in the industry. Scott Goodwin of Diameter Capital summarized the problems across six dimensions: > Some portfolios deliberately obscure or mislabel SaaS exposures; > > Direct loan managers lack portfolio construction awareness; > > Valuation inconsistencies and outright misreporting exist across different funds; > > Complex leverage instruments such as second-lien structures, joint ventures, and direct CLO equity systematically understate true leverage ratios; > > Approximately $250 billion in direct loan assets reside in "semi-liquid" products where underlying assets are entirely illiquid; > > LP prisoners' dilemma—the non-redemers may ultimately be left with worthless claims. Blackstone's decision earlier this year to rapidly write down a private loan from par value to zero shocked the market. Boaz Weinstein, founder of Saba Capital, has repeatedly publicly questioned whether the actual proportion of true first-lien loans (1L) in private credit portfolios has been artificially inflated. In a February research report, UBS predicted that under a "rapid, severe AI shock" scenario, private credit default rates could surge to as high as 15%, warning that "the most urgent risk is industry-specific shocks triggering cascading defaults," eventually spreading to life insurers heavily exposed to private equity-linked, privately credited structured products. ## **New CDS Instruments Enter Market; Hedging and Shorting Demand Converge** Against this backdrop, the emergence of new derivative instruments signals that markets are preparing for fresh risk pricing. JPMorgan Chase, alongside Bank of America, Barclays, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, and others, is collaborating with S&P Global to launch CDX Financials, a credit default swap index. This index includes private credit funds managed by Apollo, Ares, and Blackstone, collectively representing 12% of the index, with other components comprising insurance companies, regional banks, and credit card issuers. Nicholas Godec, head of fixed income products at S&P Dow Jones Indices, stated: "This will be the first credit default swap product linked to private credit, and now is the right time to launch it." Dominique Toublan, Barclays' credit strategy head, noted: "Private credit has grown rapidly, and exposure to it has accumulated across various segments of the financial system. There is genuine market demand for such products." The launch of this product bears striking resemblance to the pre-2008 financial crisis era when RMBS derivatives ruled the roost—as private credit's reach extends deeply into banks, insurers, and the entire financial system, the appearance of hedging tools reflects both market demand and the spillover of risks. **Some hedge funds had previously attempted to establish short positions by shorting individual private credit company stocks and bonds, but these operations were cumbersome and costly; the new index will significantly lower this barrier.** ## **Regulatory Intervention Reveals Systemic Risks** Ultimately, the logic of the private credit crisis cannot escape the deep interconnectivity of the financial system. **The Federal Reserve has launched an inquiry into major banks' risk exposure to private credit, focusing on the volume of debt obtained by credit funds from banks.** In pro-cyclical environments, such debt can amplify returns; in counter-cyclical environments, it directly transmits the risk of collateral shrinkage in bank loans to balance sheets. Simultaneously, **the U.S. Treasury Department is also assessing the insurance sector** and plans to hold meetings with state insurance regulators to discuss emerging risks and industry outlooks. The Treasury's concerns are far from unfounded. According to International Monetary Fund data, private credit accounts for up to 35% of total investments by insurance companies (particularly life insurers) in the United States. Over the past decade, insurance companies have continuously provided funding to non-bank lenders, who then concentrated these funds into software enterprises and packaged them into various complex structures. If the value of these software assets evaporates rapidly due to AI shocks, losses will directly pierce the insurance capital system that safeguards the savings of America's aging population. UBS points out that if the private credit crisis remains unchecked, its spread to the public credit market will be almost instantaneous. **The worst-case scenario would trigger a global financial crisis, while even the best-case scenario would force the Federal Reserve to restart large-scale quantitative easing.** ### Related Stocks - [JPM.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/JPM.US.md) - [JPX.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/JPX.US.md) - [VFH.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/VFH.US.md) - [DABS.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/DABS.US.md) - [JABS.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/JABS.US.md) - [XLF.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/XLF.US.md) - [FNCL.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/FNCL.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [Wells Fargo Reports $36.2 Billion In Private Credit Exposure As Wall Street Scrutiny Intensifies](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282739757.md) - [JPMorgan Chase Reviews First-Quarter 2026 Earnings Outlook](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282714417.md) - [With Private Credit We See The Credit Cycle Hasn't Been Repealed](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282709913.md) - [Banks Put On Alert As Powerful Anthropic AI Raises Cybersecurity Fears](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282431902.md) - [JPMorgan's markets and investment banking revenue surge, but here's why the stock is pulling back](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282682511.md)