A part of the financial market is showing significant warning signs, with worries increasing over a possible $2 trillion collapse caused by the rapid growth of private credit.
Specifically, Clem Chambers, CEO of Online Blockchain believes this sector resembles the conditions that led to the 2008 financial crisis, describing the private credit boom as a “zombie treadmill to meltdown,” he said in an interview with David Lin published on June 18.
He stated that the market, which has expanded over the last decade, is driven by unclear lending practices, inflated values, and a rising number of financially weak companies that depend on increasingly costly debt to survive.
Private credit sounds like something that’s existed for a long time. The term private credit was invented about 10 or 12 years ago. <…> There are these opaque financial companies, institutions, hedge funds, and private equity companies. <…> They raise money from people to lend to companies at 10 or 15%. That rings a red flag.<…> It’s like 2007, 2008,” he said.
Fragile web of dependence
Chambers pointed out that many of these firms are essentially lending to themselves or to companies they already own, creating a fragile web of dependence.
He called this the “zombie treadmill,” a cycle where companies struggle to meet interest payments and must continually borrow more to stay afloat. As interest rates rise, their debt burden becomes unmanageable, increasing the chance of default.
Chambers also highlighted a major concern around the lack of transparency. These loans are not marked to market, allowing institutions to report inflated values until a sudden default exposes the real risk.
While he thinks the fallout may not directly impact the banking system, Chambers warned that the overall financial effect could still be serious.
A sudden unwind of the private credit market could wipe out hundreds of billions of dollars, triggering a liquidity crisis and forcing central banks, like the Federal Reserve, to step in.
Finally, he cautioned that persistent inflation in the 5 to 6% range could be a long-term result of such a collapse, especially if the Federal Reserve needs to inject liquidity to prevent a wider economic downturn.
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