Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey has delivered his strongest warning yet about the dangers building inside the private credit market, arguing that recent failures should not be too quickly dismissed as isolated accidents. His concern is not simply about a handful of troubled borrowers, but about the way opacity in the sector could turn scattered problems into a broader loss of confidence, in a pattern that recalls the early stages of the 2008 financial crisis.
The comments are significant because private credit has become one of the fastest growing corners of global finance. The roughly $2 trillion market, built around lending by non bank institutions such as private equity firms and asset managers, has expanded rapidly as traditional banks pulled back from some areas of corporate lending. But that growth has also raised questions about transparency, underwriting discipline, and whether regulators can see risks clearly enough before they spread.
Bailey’s intervention suggests central banks are becoming less comfortable with the argument that each recent failure can be explained away as a one off. His message was not that a crisis is inevitable, but that the logic used to dismiss these concerns sounds uncomfortably similar to the reasoning heard before earlier market breakdowns.
Recent failures have shaken confidence
The latest alarm comes after a series of collapses that have unsettled investors and sharpened scrutiny of lending standards. In February, British mortgage provider Market Financial Solutions failed, following the bankruptcies last year of U.S. auto parts supplier First Brands and car dealership Tricolor. Allegations of fraud or mismanagement have been made in all three cases, intensifying concerns about the quality of underwriting and oversight in parts of the market.
Those events have fueled a wider debate about whether the problems are idiosyncratic or whether they point to deeper weaknesses. Bailey pushed back against the instinct to treat them as isolated. He said quite a few people had told him the cases were simply fraud or one off episodes and therefore should not be read as signs of something larger. His answer was cautious but pointed: that is a judgment, not a certainty.
The concern is that once investors discover one failure inside an opaque market, they may start to fear there are more weak borrowers hidden elsewhere. That shift in perception can matter as much as the original defaults themselves, because confidence is central to how credit markets function.
Opacity is what makes the sector dangerous
Bailey said one of the defining features of private credit is that it is fairly opaque. That lack of transparency means investors may have only a partial sense of where leverage sits, how strong the underlying borrowers really are, and how much trouble may be concentrated in certain pockets of the market. When everything appears stable, that opacity can be overlooked. When a failure emerges, it can suddenly become a source of systemic anxiety.
To explain the danger, Bailey used a familiar financial metaphor. If investors discover one lemon in the system, he said, they begin to suspect there may be more weak companies in the market than they previously thought, and crucially, they do not know where they are. That uncertainty can trigger a broader pullback in risk appetite, even if the original failures were limited in size.
That is what gives the current debate echoes of the period before the 2008 crisis. Bailey recalled how policymakers initially asked whether problems in the U.S. subprime mortgage market were large enough on their own to cause wider damage. Many concluded they were not. In retrospect, he said, that judgment did not age well.
The Bank of England is now stress testing the sector
In response to these concerns, the Bank of England launched a first of its kind stress test of the private credit sector in December. The exercise is designed to examine how the market is linked to the banking system and whether stress in private credit could amplify broader risks to financial stability. That focus on interconnections is important because even if the sector itself is not directly regulated by the central bank, its problems could still spill into more traditional parts of finance.
Participation in the test is voluntary because private credit firms do not fall under direct Bank of England supervision. Even so, Bailey said firms have been very cooperative and that the industry appears keen to take part in the process. The central bank is due to publish the names of participating firms and has said interim findings will be released in the middle of the year.
The stress test reflects a broader regulatory shift. Instead of waiting to see whether individual failures multiply, policymakers are trying to understand in advance how vulnerabilities in this shadow lending system might interact with banks, markets, and investor sentiment if pressure intensifies.
Bond market strains add to the policy challenge
Bailey’s warning on private credit came alongside concern about recent moves in Britain’s government bond market. Gilt yields have surged in recent weeks as the conflict involving Iran has fueled inflation fears and pushed the 10 year yield to its highest level since 2008. Bailey described the gilt market as orderly but stretched, stressing that the central bank is monitoring developments hour by hour because of their importance.
He noted that structural changes in government bond markets over the past five years have made them more vulnerable to rapid swings. Hedge funds now absorb a much larger share of sovereign debt issuance, a trend that has helped governments issue more debt but also left the system more prone to sharp and volatile reactions when shocks hit.
That matters because a prolonged war and sustained high energy prices would place further strain on monetary policy and financial stability at the same time. Bailey’s broader warning is therefore not limited to one asset class. It is about a financial system that may look calm on the surface but is becoming more exposed to sudden confidence shocks, whether they begin in private credit, bond markets, or the wider economic fallout from energy disruption.