HSBC was supposed to be jumping into private credit with both feet. One bad loan just gave Europe's biggest bank cold feet.
The Financial Times reported Friday that HSBC has paused its plan to push up to $4 billion into its own private credit funds. No money has moved yet, and two sources said there are no current plans to start.
What Changed Since Last Year
In June 2025, HSBC laid out a plan to muscle into private credit - the corner of finance where non-bank lenders make loans to companies that banks won't touch.
Up to $4 billion would go into the bank's own asset manager to grow that business. The bigger goal was to compete with Blackstone and Apollo - the two firms that run the $3.5 trillion market.
Then May 2026 hit. HSBC took a $400 million hit linked to the collapse of British mortgage lender Market Financial Solutions, and Chairman Brendan Nelson told shareholders the bank had largely finished a review of its lending policies.
The $4 billion plan is still officially alive. It's just not moving.
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The Private Credit Boom Has A Crack
Private credit isn't a sleepy corner anymore. It's a $3.5 trillion market, up from almost nothing a decade ago.
The boom has been one of finance's biggest stories of the past decade. Money rushed in as bond yields stayed low, and corporate borrowers turned to non-bank lenders for faster, more flexible deals.
Blackstone and Apollo basically run it. Big banks have spent years trying to elbow in - hoping to capture a chunk of the fees these firms collect.
The market has hit some heat lately. Regulators are asking questions, and critics call the sector opaque - meaning it can be hard to know which loans are good and which ones are about to blow up.
A few high-profile losses have spooked institutional money. The Market Financial Solutions collapse won't be the last scare across the industry.
HSBC's quarterly numbers tell part of the story. Q1 2026 net profit barely budged at about $7.35 billion, while pretax profit fell to $9.4 billion and missed analyst estimates of $9.6 billion.
What To Watch
Nelson said HSBC is "broadly comfortable" with private credit. The actions are saying something a little different than the words.
The real question is whether other big banks pull back too. Private credit's growth has been fueled partly by banks trying to keep up with Blackstone and Apollo - and if that race slows, the $3.5 trillion market loses one of its key engines.
For now, the $4 billion HSBC committed last summer is sitting on the sidelines.
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