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Private Lenders Are Calling In Loans as Defaults Triple

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Nate Gregory
Published Apr 4, 2026
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A hallway is blocked by a wooden barrier and a red rope, with doors on either side and a tiled floor—hinting at loan defaults or private lenders tightening access. The BriefsFinance logo is visible in the bottom right corner.
Summary:
  • Private credit default rates hit 9.2%, triple the historical 2-2.5% norm and approaching 2008 crisis levels.
  • Redemption gates are locking investors out of their own money while lenders demand repayment.
  • Distressed debt funds raised over $100 billion betting on forced asset sales from desperate borrowers.

The private credit market is cracking. Default rates hit 9.2%, meaning one out of every eleven loans made by non-bank lenders is now in serious trouble.

This isn't a slow burn - it's a sudden shock to a $1.7 trillion market that most investors thought was bulletproof two years ago.

What Private Credit Actually Is

Private credit means loans made directly by investment funds instead of banks - think Apollo, Ares Management, and Blackstone.

After 2020, this market exploded because traditional banks got cautious and companies loved borrowing from deep-pocketed funds with fewer restrictions.

The problem: these lenders made risky bets on companies drowning in debt, and those companies can't pay.

The Squeeze Is On

Redemption gates are activating - that's finance-speak for "your money is locked up right now." Funds are locking investors out while demanding repayment or immediate asset sales.

Real estate companies and software firms with leveraged loans - debt that exceeds normal borrowing limits - are being forced to sell assets to survive.

Morgan Stanley projects defaults could climb even higher while distressed debt buyers circle with over $100 billion ready to deploy.

What to Watch

Monitor which real estate companies start announcing asset sales over the next 90 days - those announcements will signal how deep this squeeze goes.

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