Investors beware the dangers lurking in private credit - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 基金管理

Investors beware the dangers lurking in private credit

For some observers, the rapid rise of this asset class invites unsettling historical comparisons

Back in 2007, just before the global financial crisis, Chuck Prince, then the ill-starred head of Citigroup, famously told the FT that “as long as the music is playing, you’ve got to get up and dance. We’re still dancing.”

Or in plain English: when an asset class is booming, competitive pressures force financiers to keep peddling deals — even if they fear the bubble will burst. 

It is a mantra that might haunt Jamie Dimon, head of JPMorgan, right now. In recent months, Dimon has repeatedly warned about risks lurking in private credit, which has recently had such a “meteoric rise”, to cite the Boston Federal Reserve, that it has been one of the fastest-growing finance sectors.

Dimon has noted that while there are plenty of good deals, bad ones exist too — and credit ratings are so unreliable that the sector is creating a potential “recipe for a financial crisis”.

“I’ve seen a couple of these deals that were rated by a rating agency. And . . . it shocked me what they got rated,” he observed. “It reminds me a little bit of mortgages [before the GFC].” Then this month he doubled down, suggesting we “may have seen peak private credit”.

But this year JPMorgan has also raised its allocation to private credit from $10bn to $50bn The reason? Its rivals are rushing into this space, as US President Donald Trump seeks to open the asset class to pension funds and retail investors. The financial “dancing” is intensifying.

So what should investors conclude? The first point to stress is that there are sound reasons why some investors might want to diversify their portfolios into private credit, since it has historically been a well-performing asset class with fairly stable returns (albeit high fees).

There are also good reasons why the sector exists. Post-crisis regulatory reforms have curbed bank lending in the past decades, and tariff uncertainties have damped lending again this year. However, a decade of ultra-loose monetary policy has left the system awash with liquidity, some of which has gone to private capital funds.

It is thus no surprise that when Meta recently decided to raise finance for artificial intelligence investments it looked at private credit — even though it can easily issue bonds. “Push” and “pull” factors are both at work in this boom, which has driven the global sector to almost $2tn in size, of which roughly three-quarters is in North America.

However, what concerns some observers is that the sheer speed of this rise evokes nasty historical comparisons. After all, history is full of examples of new(ish) financial products that have expanded at breakneck speed, delivered big profits for early smart-money players, but then produced large losses when retail money or unsophisticated institutional investors finally rushed in.

That happened with derivatives, leveraged loans and ESG assets. So, too, with subprime mortgage products. (I will never forget watching suave Wall Street financiers selling subprime securities to badly dressed German and Japanese regional bank managers at a securitisation summit in June 2007; it was a good sign the bubble was about to burst.)

And what makes these historical comparisons doubly unnerving is that private credit deals are typically bespoke and opaque, as their name suggests.

On a macro level, that leaves entities like the IMF and the Financial Stability Board worried about the threats of excessive, concealed leverage. On a micro level, it suggest there may be some ticking time bombs in the portfolios. And while patient capital (like sovereign wealth funds) can weather such shocks, retail investors and pensioners usually expect regular and reliable returns. Or to cite Dimon again: “There could be hell to pay . . . when the shit hits the fan” since “retail clients tend to circle the block and call their senators and congressmen” if losses erupt.

Financiers at groups such as Morningstar think problems like these can be mitigated, for example by creating mechanisms to guarantee regular payouts and pooling credits to hedge risks. And the beauty of opening the sector to retail investors, they note, is that this process of “democratisation” could force it to become more transparent and credible — and cut fees.

One hopes so: it is hard to argue against the idea that the “democratisation” of finance is a good thing — especially if it shares the returns more widely, and enables a sector to become more mature and transparent.  

However, there is another lesson from history that Wall Street should heed: when other sectors have been forced to clean up their standards in the past, this has almost invariably occurred after, not before, a big crisis hits. Painful losses are what usually sparks reform.

Maybe private credit can buck this trend — and reform itself before, not after, a bubble bursts. But this will probably only happen if institutions such as JPMorgan and BlackRock campaign for change. Don’t expect the Trump team to protect investors without such strong pressure; caveat emptor is now the mantra of the day. Anyone entering the private credit dance should be warned.

gillian.tett@ft.com

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

反弹的通胀与不耐烦的特朗普:凯文•沃什面临双重压力

美国参议院本周有望批准这位56岁的金融家接替杰伊•鲍威尔出任美联储主席。

伊朗战争推高燃气价格,印度工人纷纷逃离城市生活

伊朗战争推高了烹饪燃料价格,迫使印度许多务工人员返乡回村。

能源、军火与粮食:特朗普对伊战争日益沉重的代价

这场冲突正波及整个美国经济,造成了数千亿美元的产出损失。

肺纤维化生物科技公司Avalyn Pharma申请首次公开募股(IPO)

一家生物技术公司正开发可吸入剂型的已获批肺纤维化口服药,计划赴公开市场融资以支持其后期研发。
2天前

凯勒拉治疗学公司在生物技术领域创纪录的IPO中融资6.25亿美元

最新的生物科技公司首次公开募股创下历史新高。
2天前

法国将迎来最拥挤的大选角逐场:谁将取代马克龙?

左翼和中间阵营的分裂,助长了极右翼问鼎爱丽舍宫的希望。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×