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Wealth bankers rush to calm growing private credit fears in Asia — Bloomberg

Trista Xinyi Luo & Megawati Wijaya / Bloomberg
Trista Xinyi Luo & Megawati Wijaya / Bloomberg • 5 min read
Wealth bankers rush to calm growing private credit fears in Asia — Bloomberg
Regulators in Asia are also increasing scrutiny of the asset class, aiming to protect less-savvy individual investors.
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(March 17): Private bankers across Asia are scrambling to contain client anxiety as redemption pressures ripple through the US$1.8 trillion ($2.3 trillion) private credit market, even in a region seen as more insulated from the recent turmoil.

With investment funds’ gating mechanisms suddenly in focus, private bankers in Hong Kong and Singapore have been fielding urgent calls from their high net-worth clients seeking clarity or asking to redeem positions on the private credit products they hold, according to people familiar with the matter. Regulators in Asia are also increasing scrutiny of the asset class, aiming to protect less-savvy individual investors, who tend to be more sensitive than their institutional peers and easily rattled by negative headlines.

“Many wealth investors had never experienced a redemption queue before this cycle,” said Kher Sheng Lee, co-head of Asia Pacific at the Alternative Investment Management Association. The rapid adoption of private credit products by individuals outpaced their practical familiarity with how illiquid structures behave under stress, making it essential for fund managers, distributors and investors to bridge that knowledge gap, he said.

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