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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 March 17, 2026                            *

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*                       e-mail: fiendbear@fiendbear.com                     *

*                    web address: http://www.fiendbear.com                  *

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Fiend Commentary
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Private Credit: The Quiet Boom That Could Turn Loud

If you’ve never heard of “private credit,” you’re not alone. That’s part of the issue. Private credit has become one of the biggest pools of financing in the economy, yet it operates mostly out of the public spotlight. And when a financial corner grows quickly in the dark, the first time most people notice it is when something breaks.

Private capital lending in plain English

Think of private credit as “bank lending without the bank.”

Instead of a traditional bank making a loan to a company and holding it on the bank’s balance sheet, a private credit fund (run by an asset manager) lends directly to that company. The loan may still look like a regular business loan (interest payments, collateral, maturity date), but it lives inside a fund that is owned by institutions and, increasingly, individual investors.

Private credit is part of the broader “private capital” universe (private equity + private credit + venture + real assets). But private credit is the part that matters most when things get shaky, because it sits in the middle of the system like plumbing. When the plumbing clogs, you don’t get a headline at first. You get pressure building behind the walls.

Why private credit exploded in the first place

Private credit didn’t rise because it was evil. It rose because it was useful.

After the 2008 crisis, regulators forced banks to hold more capital and reduce risk. Banks pulled back from certain kinds of lending, especially to smaller and mid-sized companies and to borrowers that didn’t fit neat underwriting boxes.

At the same time, investors spent years starving for yield. Rates were low, safe bonds paid little, and private credit offered something that sounded almost too good to be true: higher income, less volatility, and steady returns.

And here’s the key: private credit can look smoother than public markets because it isn’t priced every second on an exchange. Many of these loans are valued using models rather than daily “price discovery.” In bull markets, that can feel like stability. In stress markets, it can become a trust problem.

What is starting to go wrong now

Cracks are showing, and they all rhyme with the same theme: too much leverage meeting a tougher world.

1.     The borrowers are under pressure
Many private credit borrowers are “middle-market” companies with floating-rate debt. When rates rose, interest costs jumped. Many businesses can survive higher costs for a while. But if growth slows too, the math turns ugly.

Sectors that were financed aggressively in the easy-money years are now feeling it. One of the most sensitive areas is software, where lenders are suddenly worrying that AI is disrupting business models faster than expected. That isn’t just a “stock market story.” If revenue growth stalls while debt costs stay high, defaults follow.

2.     “PIK interest” is a flashing warning light
PIK stands for “paid in kind.” It’s basically when a borrower can’t (or won’t) pay interest in cash and instead pays with an IOU that gets added to the loan balance.

Some PIK is planned from the start. But “bad PIK” is when a loan gets amended midstream because the borrower is under stress. That is often a polite way of saying: the borrower can’t really afford the loan anymore.

3.     The default rate is rising
Fitch reported that the U.S. private credit default rate climbed to 5.8% in January 2026 — the highest since their tracking began in 2024. That number alone doesn’t mean “crisis,” but it does mean the trend has changed.

4.     Investors are asking for their money back — and funds are putting up gates
This is the part that can turn a contained credit problem into a broader market event.

Private credit loans are illiquid. You can’t just sell them instantly the way you can sell stocks. Yet many private credit products marketed to investors offer periodic liquidity (often quarterly), typically with limits.

When redemptions surge, managers have two choices:

  • sell assets into a stressed market and risk revealing that values are lower than advertised, or
  • restrict withdrawals and risk spooking investors even more.

We’re already seeing big firms limit redemptions or cap withdrawals in major private credit funds. That’s not “a collapse,” but it’s the financial equivalent of a crowd pushing toward the exit — and the venue quietly locking some doors to prevent a stampede.

5.     Banks and insurers are more entangled than most people think
Private credit is often described as “outside the banking system.” That’s only partly true.

Banks lend to private credit funds, finance structures behind the scenes, provide credit lines, and warehouse loans. Moody’s has estimated U.S. banks have more than $925 billion of exposure to private credit and private equity (including unused commitments). That’s not something you shrug off if the cycle turns.

Meanwhile, life insurers have been increasing private credit exposure as well — which matters because insurers are considered “stable hands” in markets. If risk migrates into insurance balance sheets and those assets later prove mis-rated or mis-valued, the damage can spread slowly but deeply.

Why private credit could become “the next meltdown”

A private credit blow-up would probably not look like 2008. It would look more like a slow-motion credibility event:

  • Rising defaults lead to restructurings, “extend and pretend,” and more PIK.
  • Investors begin questioning whether reported fund values reflect real exit values.
  • Redemptions spike; gates go up; secondary market prices get uglier.
  • Banks and financing counterparties tighten terms, causing forced selling in corners of the market.
  • Suddenly the “steady 9% income machine” gets repriced as a risk asset — right when the economy is weakening.

In other words, the problem isn’t that private credit exists. The problem is what happens when a huge pool of lending is built on assumptions that only hold in calm waters: easy refinancing, stable growth, and investor confidence.

The simple takeaway

Private credit has been sold as a smoother alternative to public markets. But smooth returns don’t erase risk — they often just delay recognition of it.

When cash is cheap, almost everything looks viable. When cash gets expensive and growth slows, the real test begins.

If 2026 is shaping up as a year of “surprises,” private credit is one of the places where a surprise could matter most — because it sits underneath the economy, underneath private equity, and increasingly underneath Wall Street itself.


 

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