Private Credit Is Not a Financial Crisis In The Making
Private credit and the AI boom carry risks, but neither has the leverage or fragility that typically trigger a systemic crisis.
Illustration: Simon Bailly for Bloomberg
Seventeen years ago and change, Lehman Brothers collapsed, setting off a global financial crisis. For those of us who lived and blogged through it, the Great Recession (as it was known in the US) is seared into our memory, and no one wants to relive it. That’s why we’re so attuned to any Wall Street phenomena that might trigger another financial crisis: the AI bubble, perhaps, or the trillions of dollars in opaque credit instruments known as private credit.
Less vivid in the collective memory is the dot-com crash of 2000. It felt seismic at the time, but with hindsight, even its massive stock market losses caused only a mild recession. Wealth was destroyed, but it was mostly held by people who could afford to lose it. It’s less societally harmful when people’s 401(k) accounts go down, it turns out, than when they lose their homes. Even the stock market crash of 1929, violent as it was, didn’t really cause the Great Depression; the blame for that can be placed squarely at the feet of President Herbert Hoover. Indeed, part of the reason the 2000 crash was so benign was that central bankers had learned the lessons of 1929.