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Lest We Forget, Private Credit Is Still Imploding

quoth the raven's Photo
by quoth the raven
Thursday, Jun 04, 2026 - 16:00

Submitted by QTR's Fringe Finance

For months I’ve been arguing that investors are ignoring a growing list of warning signs across the economy and financial markets.

The reasons keep piling up. Michael Saylor is selling bitcoin to make 11.5% dividend payments on preferred stock. SpaceX’s long-awaited IPO is already generating the kind of buzz that historically shows up near market tops. The Federal Reserve remains trapped between stubborn inflation and an equity market that still looks significantly overvalued. Consumers are exhausted, buried under debt, and increasingly unable to fuel another leg of speculative excess.

Meanwhile, the bond market continues calling bullshit on the whole narrative. The 10-year and 30-year Treasury markets have become some of the most important charts in finance. Long-term yields continue pressing higher, and every Treasury auction deserves investors’ attention. Bond investors are demanding compensation for risks that stock investors appear willing to ignore.

Against that fairy tale backdrop, I’ve also spent the better part of the past year documenting what I believe is the implosion of the private credit market. And two major developments that broke last night suggest the stress is not only continuing, but may now be spreading across private markets more broadly.

The first headline comes from Partners Group Holding AG, one of Europe’s largest alternative asset managers. According to Bloomberg, the Swiss firm has been forced to cap withdrawals from its $8.6 billion Global Value SICAV evergreen private equity fund after redemption requests surged to nearly 10% of assets during the second quarter.

Investors will now be limited to redeeming just 5% of net asset value per quarter. This isn’t a distressed debt fund. This isn’t some obscure corner of the market. This is a flagship private equity vehicle operated by one of the largest alternative asset managers in the world...(READ THIS FULL ANALYSIS HERE). 

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