FSB warns of ‘double or triple whammy’ as private credit threatens markets

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The Financial Stability Board (FSB) is warning that global markets could be heading toward a chain reaction in which tighter funding, war-driven volatility, and deepening cracks in non-bank finance converge into what its chair calls a possible “double or triple whammy” for financial stability.

In a letter sent ahead of the April 16 G20 meeting, FSB Chair Andrew Bailey laid out a scenario in which several fragile parts of the financial system crack at the same time rather than one by one.

Bailey, who also serves as governor of the Bank of England, said the Middle East conflict has already increased energy prices and government bond yields, and that these shocks could collide with stretched asset valuations, concentrated leverage in the non-bank financial sector, and growing anxiety over private-credit pricing.

He identified three areas that require heightened monitoring: sovereign bond markets, asset valuations, and private credit.

New US credit crisis looms as more firms limit withdrawals – and Bitcoin could be hit firstNew US credit crisis looms as more firms limit withdrawals – and Bitcoin could be hit first
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New US credit crisis looms as more firms limit withdrawals – and Bitcoin could be hit first

Redemption pressure is forcing gates across major private credit funds, tightening liquidity and exposing structural fragility in a $1.7T market.

Apr 13, 2026 · Liam ‘Akiba’ Wright

Private credit is cracking first

Much of the recent attention on financial fragility has centered on private credit.

Private credit is a large and fast-growing corner of non-bank finance in which funds lend directly to companies rather than routing them through traditional bank channels. The sector has grown to roughly $1.8 trillion, and the past few weeks have exposed just how quickly that confidence can deteriorate.

Blue Owl Capital limited withdrawals from two of its largest private-credit funds after investors sought to redeem roughly $5.4 billion in the first quarter. At its flagship $36 billion fund, redemption requests hit 21.9% of shares outstanding, while its smaller, technology-focused vehicle saw requests reach a staggering 40.7%.

Blue Owl, like most of its peers, capped redemptions at 5%. A Barings-managed fund did the same the next day, limiting withdrawals after investors asked to withdraw 11.3% of shares. Apollo, Ares, and BlackRock all imposed similar caps during the first quarter of the year.

These aren’t isolated incidents that happened by chance. These redemption caps are a real structural test of what happens when funds hold assets that take weeks or months to sell at a fair price, yet promise investors periodic access to their cash.

In calm markets, the arrangement is smooth, and few have issues with it. But in times of crisis and heightened volatility, when too many investors head for the exit at once, the mismatch between what a fund owns and what it can quickly liquidate becomes dangerous.

However, Bailey’s letter made clear that private credit is only one of the vulnerabilities he’s tracking.

The FSB is concerned that redemption pressure at private-credit funds could reinforce tighter funding conditions and overstretched valuations elsewhere, producing a cascading sequence in which each problem makes the next one worse.

The danger looming outside traditional banks

Traditional banks are heavily regulated and hold capital buffers under frameworks such as Basel III, which were built after the 2007-09 financial crisis to strengthen resilience. Bailey said that this enabled banks to remain resilient through the current shock.

The bigger concern now sits outside the banking perimeter, in what regulators call non-bank financial intermediation, or NBFI. This broad ecosystem includes hedge funds, insurers, pension funds, and private lending vehicles, and since 2008, a significant share of credit creation and risk-taking has migrated into it. The rules are different, leverage can be higher, and transparency is often limited.

Leverage is the main accelerant here. When borrowed money amplifies positions and prices move sharply, leveraged investors are forced to sell at the same time, which pushes prices down further and radiates stress into adjacent markets.

In sovereign bond markets, the FSB warned that a limited number of funds pursuing similar high-leverage strategies have increased the risk of a disorderly unwinding that could drain liquidity from core government bond markets and trigger cross-border spillovers.

The connections between banks and non-bank lenders make this harder to contain than it might appear.

US bank lending to non-depository financial institutions has almost quadrupled over the past decade, surging to about $1.4 trillion as of the end of 2025, according to Moody’s Ratings. That lending now accounts for roughly 11% of total bank loans and is the fastest-growing portion of bank balance sheets.

The Federal Reserve is now asking major US banks for details about their exposure to private credit following the surge in redemptions and a rise in troubled loans. The Treasury Department is separately planning discussions with state insurance regulators about exposures in the same sector.

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