UBS Chairman Colm Kelleher sees growing risks in private credit as the market continues to boom.
“There is clearly an asset bubble going on,” Kelleher said Tuesday at the FT Global Banking Summit in London. “What it needs is just one thing to trigger a fiduciary crisis.”
Private credit has become an increasingly sought-after funding tool for buyout firms as banks have pulled back during a spike in interest rates and a drop in investor risk appetite. Some banks are concerned about this shift as underwriting these types of loans — then selling them to other investors — is a strong source of revenue for them.
Kelleher is the latest top executive to warn about the rising risks. Pimco executives said this month that the market is underregulated and lacks transparency.
But speaking with Bloomberg TV shortly after Kelleher’s comments, Ares Management Corp.’s co-head of European credit, Blair Jacobson, dismissed the suggestion.
“There’s no bubble at all in private credit,” he said. “There’s a lot left to go for in the large-cap side.”
The private credit market has roughly tripled in size since 2015, growing into a $1.6 trillion industry that includes traditional direct lending to smaller companies and buyout financing as well as real estate and infrastructure debt. Last week private credit funds provided a record €4.5 billion ($4.9 billion) loan to back the buyout of Adevinta ASA.