Key facts
- European regulators are seeking detailed data on private credit markets due to concerns about opacity and potential systemic risk.
- The U.S. Treasury is resisting broader data-sharing, citing confidentiality and regulatory burdens.
- European banks have an estimated €62.5 billion in direct exposure to private credit globally.
- Discussions on these data-sharing issues have taken place within international forums like the Financial Stability Board.
- Some European officials suggest stricter capital requirements may be necessary if data remains limited.
European financial supervisors are encountering significant resistance from the U.S. Treasury in their efforts to obtain more granular data on banks' exposure to the burgeoning private credit market. This divergence highlights a growing transatlantic divide in financial regulation, with European authorities increasingly concerned about the $2 trillion global private credit industry's opacity, limited disclosure, and complex structures.
Recent market stresses, including fund redemption freezes and corporate defaults, have amplified worries about hidden risks within the financial system. European regulators are pressing for details on underlying assets, borrowers, and valuation methods, but U.S. Treasury officials argue that such information is confidential and that additional reporting requirements would impose undue burdens on firms. Bundesbank board member Michael Theurer noted resistance stemming from both legal restrictions and general criticism of new bureaucratic burdens.
These discussions have taken place within international forums such as the Financial Stability Board (FSB), where patchy data and differing definitions make cross-country risk comparisons difficult. Some European officials have indicated that without better information, they may be compelled to implement stricter capital requirements for banks to mitigate potential losses. While recent European Central Bank analysis suggests direct exposures for euro zone banks are modest (€62.5 billion), officials emphasize that these aggregate views are insufficient given the complex, multi-layered nature of private credit investments.
Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman has stated that non-bank defaults would need to be "abnormally high" to pose a risk to banks, and that bank loans to private credit firms appear well-collateralized. However, she also noted the Fed is enhancing its reporting requirements for banks regarding non-bank lending to better assess concentration risks.
