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Powell says Fed watching private credit for risks

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Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank is monitoring the private credit market for stress but does not see it as a threat to overall financial stability right now, according to Reuters reporting from an event at Harvard University on Monday.

Powell emphasized that regulators are focused on potential links to banks and possible contagion, while also engaging directly with lenders and firms active in the space.

Fed focus is on contagion risk

Powell said the Fed is alert to vulnerabilities but does not view current developments as systemwide.

“I’m reluctant to say anything that suggests that we’re dismissive of the risk,” he said, adding that officials are “looking for connections to the banking system and things that might, you know, result in contagion. We don’t see those right now.”

According to Reuters, Powell spoke at Harvard University and framed the Fed’s vigilance around the possibility that stress in private credit could spill over to banks, which would raise broader financial stability concerns.

Scale and oversight, according to Powell

Powell described private credit as a smaller slice within a large pool of assets, while underscoring the degree of scrutiny from supervisors.

He said it is “a relatively small part of a very large asset pool, we’re watching it super carefully,” and noted that “regulators are on the issue.”

He also said the Fed and other regulators are gathering information from market participants.

“We’re also getting the back story from the people who run these organizations and from all the banks,” Powell said, adding that authorities “are well aware of what the banks’ exposure is.”

Losses possible without a systemic event

Powell acknowledged that parts of the market may face difficulties, while drawing a line between localized losses and a broader shock.

“There’ll be people losing money and things like that,” he said, but it “doesn’t seem to have the makings of a broader systemic event.”

That view suggests the Fed sees pockets of risk that are manageable, provided they do not transmit through the banking system in a destabilizing way.

Why it matters

Private credit has grown in prominence as a source of financing outside traditional banks, and regulators have flagged the need to monitor how stress in less transparent corners of finance could affect lenders.

Powell’s remarks indicate ongoing surveillance of those channels, with attention on any bank exposures that could propagate strain.

The message for markets is cautious but measured: authorities are on alert for signs of spillover, yet the Fed does not currently see the ingredients for a banking or market-wide crisis emerging from private credit.

The bottom line

Powell’s comments signal that the Fed is watching private credit closely, coordinating with banks and market players, and ready to respond if pressures threaten to ripple into the broader financial system.

For now, officials do not view the sector as a catalyst for systemic contagion.

The post Powell says Fed watching private credit for risks appeared first on Invezz

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