Cracks Behind the S&P High: Financial Sector Down 6% Year-to-Date, $2 Trillion Private Credit Undercurrents Spreading
Amidst the S&P 500 hitting record highs with strong Q1 earnings, the financial sector (XLF ETF) is the worst performer, down over 6% year-to-date. Its relative weakness versus the broader market is at a historic low, surpassing levels seen during the 2008 and 2020 crises. This divergence points to growing stress in the $2 trillion private credit market.
Despite robust bank earnings, investor concern focuses on hidden balance sheet risks. The private credit market, which ballooned post-2008, is showing cracks. The Financial Stability Board (FSB) recently warned of its systemic risks, high leverage, and reliance on risky payment-in-kind loans. Concurrently, major funds are facing significant redemptions; Blackstone's flagship BCRED fund saw $3.7bn in withdrawal requests, a record high.
Technical indicators for the financial sector are bearish, with XLF trading below its 200-day moving average. Historical data suggests a high probability of a near-term market pullback when such conditions coincide with a market high. Initial "Trump re-election" optimism for the sector has faded due to unmet expectations for rate cuts and emerging private credit woes.
Analysts warn the interconnected risks from private credit could spread wider than anticipated, advising investor caution over adding new exposure to the current market.
marsbit05/08 13:05