Comments

  • By JumpCrisscross 2026-03-1214:044 reply

    Yeah, I'm going down a bit of a rabbit hole this morning. Turns out Wells Fargo's $59.7bn of private-credit lending is equal to 44% of its CE Tier 1 capital [1]. Meanwhile, Deutsche Bank got back to being Deutsche Bank while I was not looking [2].

    [1] https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/72971/00000729712500...

    [2] https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/deutsche-bank-highl...

  • By fairity 2026-03-1215:256 reply

    So, if I’m following: Banks are lending to private equity firms to fund purchases of businesses.

    Many of these businesses are SaaS which means their valuations are tumbling.

    It seems possible that valuations tumble so much that the private equity owner no longer has any incentive to operate the business, bc all future cash flows will belong to the bank. What happens in practice then? Will banks actually step in and take operational control? Will the banks renegotiate terms such that the private equity owners are incentivized to continue as stewards? Or, will they prefer to force a business sale immediately?

  • By rglover 2026-03-1213:328 reply

    Misleading title*

    > The default rate among U.S. corporate borrowers of private credit rose to a record 9.2% in 2025

    Emphasis added. Headline makes it sound like retail credit, not corporate specifically.

    *Edit: Not misleading, just an unfamiliar term/usage from my perspective. I'm not a finance guy so didn't know the difference and assumed others wouldn't either. Mea culpa.

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