I've been following finance long enough to know that the scariest moments aren't the ones with headlines. They're the quiet ones — the slow build-ups that nobody talks about because something louder is happening on the other side of the room. Right now, while the whole world is glued to what's happening in the Middle East, there's a financial story unfolding that — if it goes the wrong way — will matter a lot more to most people's everyday lives than any geopolitical conflict. It's called private credit. And it is not okay.
So what even is private credit?
Think of it this way. A company needs to borrow money. Instead of going to a bank, it goes to a private fund — a Blackstone, a Blue Owl, an Apollo — that lends it cash at high interest rates (usually 10–12%). The fund raises that cash from investors who were promised solid returns and, importantly, the ability to take their money back every quarter. It sounds fine. And for about a decade, while interest rates were near zero, it mostly was. The market ballooned to roughly $2 trillion. The stocks of these firms soared — KKR up 103%, Apollo 78%, Blue Owl 81% — all between mid-2023 and January 2025. Everyone was happy. Then rates went up and stayed up. The companies borrowing from these funds started struggling to pay back their loans. And the investors who put their money in started asking for it back — at the exact same time. That's where it gets messy.
September 2025 — the first two cracks
Two companies collapsed within days of each other last September, and in retrospect they were the warning shots. First, Tricolor Holdings — a subprime auto lender — filed for Chapter 7 liquidation on September 10, 2025, amid fraud allegations that included pledging the same collateral to multiple lenders at once. Then, on September 28, First Brands Group — an auto parts manufacturer with $6 billion in debt — filed for Chapter 11. The court filings revealed $10–50 billion in liabilities against just $1–10 billion in assets, plus $2.3 billion in what prosecutors charged as fabricated receivables. Its loans ended up trading at around 11 cents on the dollar. UBS alone lost roughly $500 million. JPMorgan, Jefferies — everyone with exposure got burned. Jamie Dimon summed it up bluntly: "When you see one cockroach, there are probably more."
February 2026 — Blue Owl slams the door
On February 18–19, 2026, Blue Owl Capital made an announcement that sent shockwaves through the industry. It permanently halted quarterly redemptions from its $1.6 billion OBDC II fund — a vehicle that had been sold to retail investors as "semi-liquid." Withdrawal requests had surged 200%. To raise cash, they did a fire sale of $600 million in loans, returned about 30% of the fund's net asset value to shareholders, and paid down a Goldman Sachs credit facility. Their stock fell 9% on the news. Blackstone and Apollo fell over 5% in sympathy. The thing that gets me about this one: Blue Owl had already tried to quietly merge this struggling fund into a listed vehicle — a move that would have instantly hit investors with a roughly 20% loss. There was an uproar. They cancelled it. Then weeks later they just closed the gate entirely. The investors who thought they had a quarterly exit window are now waiting — potentially for years — to get their money back.
March 2026 — the dominoes fall
This is where it stops being a story about one fund and starts being a story about a whole industry. In the first two weeks of March 2026, almost every major name in private credit made a headline — and none of them were good.
BlackRock — the world's largest asset manager with $14 trillion under management — restricted withdrawals from its $26 billion HPS Corporate Lending Fund. Investors tried to pull $1.2 billion — nearly double the 5% quarterly cap. They got back $620 million. The rest stayed locked in.
Blackstone's BCRED fund saw investors try to pull $3.8 billion — 7.9% of assets. To their credit (no pun intended), Blackstone honored every single request. But to do it, they had to inject $400 million of their own capital — including money from senior executives personally. That's an extraordinary move. It's also a sign of how bad things are when the firm itself has to step in.
Morgan Stanley's North Haven Private Income Fund got hit with withdrawal requests for 10.9% of all shares. They returned $169 million — which sounds decent until you realize that was only 45.8% of what investors asked for. More than half of the money people wanted out stayed inside the fund.
And then Cliffwater — a $33 billion flagship private credit fund — faced a record redemption request of 14%. It capped payouts at 7%. Investors asking to leave were told: you can get half of what you asked for, at best.
JPMorgan, meanwhile, has started marking down valuations of private credit positions — particularly in software companies it believes are vulnerable to AI disruption. Deutsche Bank has disclosed around $30 billion in private credit exposure. Its stock fell 6.1% on the news. The firewall between private credit and traditional banks is being tested in real time.
The part nobody's reporting: companies refusing to be acquired Here's something I find really telling. A growing number of large companies are now actively refusing acquisition offers from private equity and private credit funds. Not because the price is wrong. Because they don't want to end up like the companies that came before them — loaded with debt they didn't create, stripped of cash that could have gone to employees or investment, run into the ground to produce fees for fund managers. When the people being offered money start turning it down, something has fundamentally changed in how the market perceives these funds. That's not a regulatory problem. That's a reputation problem. And reputations, once gone, are very hard to get back.
Who's actually going to feel this
This is the thing that keeps me up at night. In 2008, the people who got hurt were largely institutions and homeowners. What's different this time is that private credit funds spent the last few years aggressively marketing to ordinary retail investors — people with $50,000 or $100,000 in savings looking for better returns than a savings account. Blue Owl raised around 40% of its $300 billion in assets from individual investors. The pitch was "democratizing" access to institutional-grade returns. What nobody emphasized loudly enough was the part where, under certain conditions, you can't get your money out. Those conditions are now here. And the people least equipped to handle a multi-year lockup are the people who were last to be invited to the party.
The total market cap destruction across the major PE firms since January 2025 is over $265 billion. Apollo is down 41% from its peak, Blackstone 46%, Ares and KKR 48% each, Blue Owl by two thirds. These aren't rounding errors — these are catastrophic drawdowns for the sector's flagship names.
Why you're not hearing about it
I'm not going to pretend the Iran war was engineered to distract from private credit. That's not how the world works. But I will say this: the timing has been extraordinarily convenient for an industry that benefits enormously from not being scrutinized. Every week that the front pages are full of missiles and oil prices is a week when congressional hearings about private credit opacity aren't happening. When the DOJ's warnings about shadow defaults — companies paying interest in more debt instead of cash — stay buried in the financial section. When the structural mismatch at the heart of all this (illiquid loans, liquid-ish promises to investors) doesn't get the public attention it deserves. Fortune ran a story yesterday titled "The $265 billion private credit meltdown." It's detailed, it's alarming, and it's completely accurate. You probably didn't see it trending anywhere.
I don't know if this becomes 2008 or if it gets quietly managed. Maybe rates drop in time, maybe the funds absorb the pressure. But I do know this: the people who get hurt in financial crises are almost always the ones who didn't know the risk was there. Right now, millions of ordinary investors are sitting in "semi-liquid" private credit funds, being told their money is safe, while the firms managing it are quietly telling the market: sorry, you can't have it back right now. That deserves to be on the front page. Not buried under missile strikes.