George Noble@gnoble79
We're watching a financial crisis unfold in real time.
The last time funds started blocking investors from getting their money back, Bear Stearns collapsed six months later.
In 2007, BNP Paribas froze €1.6 billion in funds.
Bear Stearns declared 2 funds "essentially worthless" and gated a third.
Everyone said it was "contained."
6 months later the entire financial system nearly went under.
I'm not saying we're there YET...
But I am saying the pattern is rhyming.
BlackRock just capped withdrawals from its $26 billion HPS Corporate Lending Fund after investors demanded 9.3% of their shares back - nearly DOUBLE the fund's 5% quarterly limit.
Investors wanted $1.2 billion out. BlackRock gave them $620 million and said no to the rest.
BlackRock stock dropped 7%. KKR, Ares, Apollo, Blue Owl - all down 5-6% on the same day. The financial sector ETF is off 9% in a month.
This is the same BlackRock that just slashed a $25 million private credit loan from 100 to ZERO in 3 months. Full value one quarter. Worthless the next.
And they'd already done the exact same thing months earlier with Renovo Home Partners.
But this isn't just a BlackRock problem.
Look at the dominoes:
Last summer, Tricolor and First Brands went unexpectedly bankrupt. $10-15 billion in combined liabilities. Write-offs hit JPMorgan, UBS, and Jefferies.
Then a UK lender called Market Financial Solutions collapsed with a £2.4 billion loan book.
Fraud allegations. Double-pledged collateral. Barclays exposed for £500 million. Apollo, Elliott, Santander - all caught in the wreckage.
Then Blue Owl permanently halted redemptions. Stock cut in HALF.
Then Blackstone's $82 billion flagship fund got hit with $3.8 billion in redemption requests. They had to pump in $400 million of their own money just to meet demands.
Now BlackRock is literally blocking the exits.
Even Apollo's own CEO warned a shakeout is coming.
When EVERYONE at the top is waving red flags - pay attention.
UBS raised its worst-case default forecast to 15%. Defaults sit at 3-5% today. The trajectory is ugly.
Here's the structural problem:
After 2008, regulations pushed risky lending OUT of banks and INTO private credit.
The sector ballooned to $3 trillion. But these funds make 5-7 year loans while promising investors quarterly liquidity.
That works until everyone wants out at once. Which is exactly what's happening.
40% of sponsor-backed loans are tied to the software industry - the same sector AI is threatening to destroy.
The Fed pumped 40% more money into the system after Covid and kept rates at zero.
That easy money funded garbage underwriting. And now there's a $162 billion maturity wall hitting THIS YEAR.
I've been warning about private credit for weeks. The story is always the same:
Opaque valuations. Illiquid assets. Limited transparency. And the false promise of steady returns with no volatility.
The whole sales pitch was equity-like returns with bond-like stability. But you can't eliminate volatility - you can only HIDE it...
Until you can't.
When the WORLD'S LARGEST ASSET MANAGER starts blocking investors from getting their money back, that's not "noise".
That's an alarm.
Get out before the exit gets more crowded.