IMF: $2 trillion private credit not a 2008 crisis
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- IMF official Tobias Adrian said the $2 trillion private‑credit market will not trigger a crisis like 2008, noting banks are not currently at risk.
- Private‑credit market default rates sit at 2‑3%; even a rise to 4‑6% under a global credit‑cycle slowdown would remain manageable for financial markets.
- Credit‑originating firms retain the bulk of loan‑risk exposure and actively monitor and restructure troubled loans, aligning incentives better than the 2008 subprime securitisation.
- Insurance companies have only a very small share of private‑credit exposure, limiting broader systemic impact.
- Fund managers can limit withdrawals, with roughly 15 % of the $2 trillion market redeemable, helping contain systemic risk.
- Middle‑East war raises global financial risks, and the IMF warns that a prolonged conflict could increase the likelihood of a market sell‑off.
Why it matters: Investors, banks and regulators gain confidence that the private‑credit sector’s risk is largely self‑contained, easing pressure on credit markets, while insurers and pension funds are shielded from large losses; however, the IMF warns that a protracted Middle‑East war could reignite systemic concerns.

