The $1.8 trillion private credit market is facing a historic reckoning as plummeting valuations and rising defaults trigger a systemic sell-off across Wall Street's largest shadow lenders.
Private Credit Fears Intensify
Blue Owl Capital Inc.(NYSE:OWL) has become the face of a broadening crisis, with shares plunging over 30% year-to-date. The decline accelerated after industry titans began warning of hidden rot within loan portfolios.
Blue Owl's internal stress became public in February when it announced a pivot to accelerate redemptions, liquidating $1.4 billion in assets to return capital to exiting investors. The stock was also down 41.43% over the last six months and 48.85% over the year.
While CEO Craig Packercharacterized the move as a “strategic transaction,” short interest in OWL has surged to an all-time high of 17.9%.
As financing rates to borrow short positions jump +266%, the market is signaling that the private credit meltdown may only be in its early stages.
Cracks in the US private credit market are intensifying:
Blue Owl Capital shares dropped -22.7% in February, posting their worst month on record.
This marks the 7th consecutive monthly decline, the longest streak in history.
— The Kobeissi Letter (@KobeissiLetter) March 5, 2026
The ‘Cockroach’ Warning Realized
JPMorgan Chase & Co.(NYSE:JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon sparked a firestorm by comparing recent credit bankruptcies to seeing a "cockroach," suggesting that where one default appears, many more remain hidden.
The warning was echoed by Allianz's Mohamed El-Erian, who noted that “cockroaches don't come in ones and twos” and argued that years of lax standards have made further defaults inevitable.
Blue Owl co-CEO Marc Lipschultz fired back at the “fear-mongering,” quipping that “there might be a lot more cockroaches at JPMorgan,” but the market remains unconvinced.
Rapid Wipeouts And Liquidity Stress
Investor panic is fueled by the speed of recent collapses. BlackRock Inc.(NYSE:BLK) recently slashed a private loan to Infinite Commerce from 100 cents on the dollar to zero in just three months, according to a Bloomberg report.
This highlights a dangerous lag between reported valuations and actual company performance. This par-to-zero phenomenon has left investors questioning the stability of illiquid assets.
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