Connect with us

News

Where the next financial crisis could emerge

Published

on

Where the next financial crisis could emerge

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

The recent growth of private markets has been a phenomenon. Indeed, private funds, which include venture capital, private equity, private debt, infrastructure, commodities and real estate, now dominate financial activity. According to consultants McKinsey, private markets’ assets under management reached $13.1tn in mid-2023 and have grown at close to 20 per cent a year since 2018.

For many years private markets have raised more in equity than public markets, where shrinkage as a result of share buybacks and takeover activity has not been made good by a dwindling volume of new issues. The vibrancy of private markets means that companies can stay private indefinitely, with no worries about gaining access to capital.

One outcome is a significant increase in the proportion of the equity market and the economy that is non-transparent to investors, policymakers and the public. Note that disclosure requirements are largely a matter of contract rather than regulation.

Advertisement

Much of this growth has taken place against the background of ultra-low interest rates since the 2007-08 financial crisis. McKinsey points out that roughly two-thirds of the total return for buyout deals entered in 2010 or later and exited in 2021 or before can be attributed to broader moves in market valuation multiples and leverage, rather than improved operating efficiency.

Today these windfall gains are no longer available. Borrowing costs have risen thanks to tighter monetary policy, and private equity managers have been having difficulty selling portfolio companies in a less buoyant market environment. Yet institutional investors have an ever-growing appetite for illiquid alternative investments. And big asset managers are seeking to attract rich retail investors into the area.

With public equity close to all-time highs, private equity is seen as offering better exposure to innovation within an ownership structure that ensures greater oversight and accountability than in the quoted sector. Meanwhile, half of funds surveyed by the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum, a UK think-tank, said they expected to increase their exposure to private credit over the next 12 months — up from about a quarter last year.

At the same time politicians, most notably in the UK, are adding impetus to this headlong rush, with a view to encouraging pension funds to invest in riskier assets, including infrastructure. Across Europe, regulators are relaxing liquidity rules and price caps in defined contribution pension plans.

Whether investors will reap a substantial illiquidity premium in these heady markets is moot. A joint report by asset manager Amundi and Create Research highlights the high fees and charges in private markets. It also outlines the opacity of the investment process and performance evaluation, high friction costs caused by premature exit from portfolio companies, high dispersion in ultimate investment returns and an all-time high level of dry powder — sums allocated but not invested, waiting for opportunities to arise. The report warns that the huge inflows into alternative assets could dilute returns.

Advertisement

There are wider economic questions about the burgeoning of private markets. As Allison Herren Lee, a former commissioner of the US Securities and Exchange Commission, has pointed out, private markets depend substantially on the ability to free ride on the transparency of information and prices in public markets. And as public markets continue to shrink, so does the value of that subsidy. The opacity of private markets could also lead to a misallocation of capital, according to Herren Lee.

Nor is the private equity model ideal for some types of infrastructure investment, as the experience of the British water industry demonstrates. Lenore Palladino and Harrison Karlewicz of the University of Massachusetts argue that asset managers are the worst kind of owners for an inherently long-term good or service. This is because they have no incentive to sacrifice in the short term for long-term innovations or even maintenance.

Much of the dynamic behind the shift to private markets is regulatory. Tougher capital adequacy requirements on banks after the financial crisis drove lending into more lightly regulated non-bank financial institutions. This was no bad thing in the sense that there were helpful new sources of credit for small- and medium-sized companies. But the related risks are harder to track.

According to Palladino and Karlewicz, private credit funds pose a unique set of potential systemic risks to the broader financial system because of their interrelationship with the regulated banking sector, the opacity of the terms of loans, the illiquid nature of the loans and potential maturity mismatches with the needs of limited partners (investors) to withdraw funds.

For its part, the IMF has argued that the rapid growth of private credit, coupled with increasing competition from banks on large deals and pressure to deploy capital, may lead to a deterioration in pricing and non-pricing terms, including lower underwriting standards and weakened covenants, raising the risk of credit losses in the future. No prizes for guessing where the next financial crisis will emerge from.

Advertisement

       

News

Lawmakers threaten Attorney General Bondi with contempt over incomplete Epstein files

Published

on

Lawmakers threaten Attorney General Bondi with contempt over incomplete Epstein files

Attorney General Pam Bondi, accompanied by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche (L) and FBI Director Kash Patel (R), speaks during a news conference at the Justice Department on Nov. 19. Some lawmakers said the department’s release of files relating to Jeffrey Epstein had too many redactions as well as missing information.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Two lawmakers are threatening a seldom-used congressional sanction against the Department of Justice over what they say is a failure to release all of its files on convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein by a deadline set in law.

Reps. Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie spearheaded the effort to force the Epstein files’ release by co-sponsoring the Epstein Files Transparency Act, but both have said the release had too many redactions as well as missing information.

“I think the most expeditious way to get justice for these victims is to bring inherent contempt against Pam Bondi,” Massie, a Republican from Kentucky, told CBS’s Face the Nation on Sunday. “Basically Ro Khanna and I are talking about and drafting that right now.”

Advertisement

Inherent contempt refers to Congress’ authority to fine or arrest and then bring to trial officers who are obstructing legislative functions. It was last successfully used in the 1930s, according to the American Bar Association.

Khanna, a California Democrat, noted that the House would not need the Senate’s approval to take such action, which he said would result in a fine for Attorney General Pam Bondi.

“I believe we’re going to get bipartisan support in holding her accountable,” he told Face the Nation.

Justice Department defends partial release

The Justice Department on Sunday defended its initial, partial release of documents, some of which were heavily redacted.

“The material that we released on Friday, or the material that we’re going to release over the next a couple of weeks, is exactly what the statute requires us to release,” said Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche on NBC’s Meet the Press, referring to the Epstein Files Transparency Act.

Advertisement

Blanche said the administration has hundreds of lawyers going through the remaining documents to ensure that victims’ information is protected. Still, lawmakers from both parties remain unsatisfied.

“Any evidence or any kind of indication that there’s not a full reveal on this, this will just plague them for months and months more,” said Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky on ABC’s This Week. “My suggestion would be — give up all the information, release it.”

Blanche told NBC he was not taking the threats of contempt seriously.

“Not even a little bit. Bring it on,” he said, adding that lawmakers who have spoken negatively about Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel “have no idea what they’re talking about.”

Back and forth over Trump photo

The trove of documents released Friday contained little new information about Epstein, prompting accusations that the department wasn’t complying with the law. There was a photograph included in Friday’s release that showed a desk full of photos, including at least one of President Trump. It was among more than a dozen photographs no longer available in the Justice Department’s “Epstein Library” by Saturday, NPR found.

Advertisement

On Sunday, the Justice Department re-uploaded the photo of the desk, and provided an explanation on X.

“The Southern District of New York flagged an image of President Trump for potential further action to protect victims,” the post read. “Out of an abundance of caution, the Department of Justice temporarily removed the image for further review. After the review, it was determined there is no evidence that any Epstein victims are depicted in the photograph, and it has been reposted without any alteration or redaction.”

The Justice Department did not offer an explanation for the other photos whose access had been removed.

Blanche told NBC the Justice Department was not redacting information around Trump or any other individual involved with Epstein. He said the Justice Department had removed photos from the public files “because a judge in New York has ordered us to listen to any victim or victim rights group, if they have any concerns about the material that we’re putting up.

“And so when we hear concerns, whether it’s photographs of women that we do not believe are victims, or we didn’t have information to show that they were victims, but we learned that there are concerns, of course, we’re taking that photograph down and we’re going to address it,” he said.

Advertisement

Earlier Sunday, the Justice Department also posted to X a new version of the 119-page transcript of grand jury proceedings in the case of Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell. The original version had been entirely redacted.

“Here is the document now with minimal redactions. Documents and photos will continue to be reviewed consistent with the law and with an abundance of caution for victims and their families,” the Justice Department wrote in its post.

Continue Reading

News

Russia says talks on US peace plan for Ukraine ‘are proceeding constructively’

Published

on

Russia says talks on US peace plan for Ukraine ‘are proceeding constructively’

FILE – Russian Presidential foreign policy adviser Yuri Ushakov, left, U.S. President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, center, U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff, foreground right, and Russian Direct Investment Fund CEO Special Presidential Representative for Investment and Economic Cooperation with Foreign Countries Kirill Dmitriev, behind Witkoff, arrive to attend talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Senate Palace of the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, Dec. 2, 2025. (Alexander Kazakov, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)

The Associated Press

Continue Reading

News

Video: First Batch of Epstein Files Provides Few Revelations

Published

on

Video: First Batch of Epstein Files Provides Few Revelations

new video loaded: First Batch of Epstein Files Provides Few Revelations

transcript

transcript

First Batch of Epstein Files Provides Few Revelations

The Justice Department, under pressure from Congress to comply with a law signed by President Trump, released more than 13,000 files on Friday arising from investigations into Jeffrey Epstein.

Put out the files and stop redacting names that don’t need to be redacted. It’s just — who are we trying to protect? Are we protecting the survivors? Or are we protecting these elite men that need to be put out there?

Advertisement
The Justice Department, under pressure from Congress to comply with a law signed by President Trump, released more than 13,000 files on Friday arising from investigations into Jeffrey Epstein.

By McKinnon de Kuyper

December 20, 2025

Continue Reading

Trending