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A Small UK Bridge Lender Just Cost Global Banks Over $1 Billion

Published May 18, 2026
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Summary:
  • Market Financial Solutions entered insolvency in February amid fraud claims.
  • Barclays, HSBC, Wells Fargo, Apollo and Elliott Management are among those exposed.
  • MFS allegedly pledged the same real estate as collateral against multiple loans, leaving a £1.3 billion shortfall.

Most readers have never heard of Market Financial Solutions. It is a small UK lender that made short-term property loans to people banks would not touch.

It just blew a billion-dollar hole through the global banking system.

What Happened

MFS failed on Feb. 25 amid fraud claims. The fall has shaken the UK lending market.

Bridge loans are short loans used to cover a gap. They get paid off when longer funding shows up.

The fraud claims include "double pledging." That is where the same property was put up as backing against more than one loan.

There is also a £1.3 billion gap between what MFS's collateral was worth and what it owed lenders.

CEO Paresh Raja, who lives in Dubai, denies any wrongdoing.

The damage is not local. About a dozen U.S. and European firms are tangled up in MFS's lending deals.

Think of it like Russian dolls. Banks lent to MFS, and asset managers lent to those banks. Packagers wrapped some of it for outside buyers. When MFS failed, every link in that chain ended up exposed.

The UK bridge lending market was sized at about £13.4 billion ($17.8 billion) at the end of 2025, per the Bridging & Development Lenders Association.

MFS was seen as a key player in that market.

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Who's On The Hook

Barclays took a £228 million ($308 million) hit last quarter.

HSBC booked a $400 million writedown. Its loss was routed through an Apollo-backed vehicle called Atlas SP.

Santander is in for about $267 million.

On the U.S. side, Elliott Management is in for £200 million. Wells Fargo is in for £143 million.

Jefferies has £103 million on the line. It has booked a $20 million loss so far.

Avenue Capital and Castlelake round out the list at £98 million and £70 million.

Final losses could come in lower if more of the backing is recovered. Still, the disclosed total is already north of a billion dollars.

Why It Matters

Sumit Gupta of Oxane Partners said the MFS story is not a sign of cracks in private credit. He said it points to weak internal checks.

"It exposes how hard it can be to see risk clearly when data is fragmented across managers, servicers, trustees, bank accounts and financing vehicles," Gupta told CNBC.

This is the second time this cycle that a niche lender has taken out global firms. The fall of U.S. auto parts maker First Brands last year hit a similar mix of banks and asset managers.

The MFS fall has banks taking a closer look at their ties to small lenders and private credit shops.

What To Watch

Court hearings will sort out how much of MFS's £2.4 billion loan book is backed by real assets.

That number will reset what each exposed firm ends up writing down.

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