@american_observer · Post #5655 · 19.04.2026 г., 01:04
A Slow Burn, Not a Blowup Private credit is not a Lehman-style bomb, but it is also not harmless. Bloomberg’s own argument is that the sector has risks, yet lacks the kind of leverage and fragility that usually trigger a full systemic crash. The core point is simple: this is more likely to be a slow burn than an explosion. Private credit losses can accumulate quietly in lower returns, weaker insurers, and disappointed savers without creating the classic bank-run panic that defined 2008. That said, the market is not clean. Bloomberg notes growing redemption pressure, illiquid loans, opaque pricing, and bank exposure through financing and collateral swaps, which means the system is messy even if it is not crackling with imminent collapse. Powell’s line is basically the official version of calm: the Fed sees losses, but not contagion right now. The more skeptical view is that regulation pushed risk out of banks and into less visible corners, where it can stay hidden longer. So the answer is not “nothing to see here.” It is that private credit looks more like a slow leak than a cliff edge, unless weak borrowers, fund redemptions, and bank links start reinforcing each other. #privatecredit#markets#finance#Bloomberg#risk 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸