Every major financial regulation eventually produces the market it was trying to prevent. The Investment Company Act of 1940 was sensible enough in its original intent. Its practical effect, forty years later, was a capital drought: private equity and venture capital firms were legally capped at 100 investors, choking off funding for the growing businesses that needed it most. Congress fixed the problem by creating another regulatory structure—the Small Business Investment Incentive Act of 1980, which established Business Development Companies. In this framework, publicly-traded funds that could lend to private mid-sized businesses under SEC oversight. It worked; BDCs channeled capital to companies too large for community banks and too small for public bond markets.
Then came 2008, and another round of regulation, and another capital shortage, and another market workaround. Today that workaround has grown into a nearly $2 trillion industry that regulators call “shadow banking”—with all the sinister implications that phrase carries. The IMF wants to oversee it. Congress is considering disclosure requirements. And somewhere in a think tank, someone is already drafting the framework that will produce the next workaround, twenty years from now.
This is not a cycle of greed. It is spontaneous order doing what it always does: finding the path around the obstruction. The shadow is not a creature of finance. It is the shape of the wall. But some of what is living in that shadow today is genuinely dangerous, and understanding the difference requires being honest about both.
What Dodd-Frank Actually Did to Credit
The post-2008 regulatory apparatus rested on a reasonable diagnosis: banks had been too thinly capitalized and too willing to make leveraged loans they later packaged and sold. The solution—Dodd-Frank and the Basel III capital framework, implemented jointly from 2013—required banks to hold substantially more capital against leveraged and commercial loans. The cost of that lending at regulated banks rose sharply. The demand for it did not.
Private credit assets under management in North America stood at $170 billion in 2007. By 2024, they had reached $1.24 trillion—a sevenfold increase in 17 years. BDC assets alone grew from under $30 billion to $438 billion by the end of 2024. This is capital following demand across a regulatory boundary that regulation itself drew. Mid-sized businesses still needed financing for acquisitions, equipment, and working capital. They found new lenders. The lenders found new structures. The market kept moving.
The Knowledge That Banks Were Forced to Abandon
What private credit markets have genuinely gotten right is something the regulated banking system, optimized for originate-to-distribute, structurally cannot do: it actually learns the business it lends to. A University of Chicago analysis of direct lending found that private credit lenders secure loans with blanket liens—claims on the firm’s continuation value—in 79 percent of cases, compared to under 15 percent for banks. This is not recklessness. It reflects how deeply these lenders know their borrowers. You only bet on a firm’s future when you understand it well enough to believe in it.
This is Hayek’s knowledge problem in its most concrete financial form. The dispersed, relationship-specific information about a borrower’s true creditworthiness—management quality, competitive position, cash flow resilience—cannot be encoded in a standardized capital requirement. It lives in the judgment of a lender who has spent time with the company. When regulation pushes that lender out of the market, the knowledge leaves with them. When the market builds a new channel, that knowledge returns—imperfectly, unevenly, but genuinely.
The Risk Is Real — and Austrian Theory Explains Why
Here is where intellectual honesty requires slowing down. The Federal Reserve’s own analysis warned that private credit fund managers, under pressure to deploy capital within fixed timelines, might “choose riskier deals, offer more covenant-lite loans, or more generally reduce underwriting standards.” That prediction has materialized. Covenant-lite loans now represent 93 percent of new institutional leveraged loan issuance—structures that omit the periodic financial tests that historically gave lenders early warning when a borrower’s performance deteriorated. Without those tripwires, lenders often discover trouble only when a payment is missed or liquidity has nearly run out.
The headline default figures look contained, but stress is accumulating in less visible forms. Selective defaults—covenant waivers, distressed debt exchanges, and out-of-court restructurings—outpaced conventional defaults five-to-one in 2024. Payment-in-kind loans, where interest rolls into principal rather than being paid in cash—what one analysis calls “pencil yield,” income accrued on paper but never actually received—now account for 11 to 12 percent of BDC loan holdings. In the lower-middle market, borrowers with less than $10 million in EBITDA show covenant default rates above 31 percent, yet loans are still marked at 98.7 percent of par. That smoothness is not a sign of health, it is a sign of infrequent and self-serving valuation.
None of this should surprise anyone familiar with Austrian business cycle theory. The Federal Reserve held rates near zero for over a decade. Institutional investors, unable to generate adequate returns from conventional fixed income, flooded into private credit funds in search of yield. That pressure—dry powder in private credit has nearly quadrupled since 2014—forced managers to deploy capital into increasingly-marginal deals on increasingly generous terms. This is malinvestment—not of individual bad actors, but of an entire asset class responding rationally to a price signal that had been systematically distorted by central bank policy. The bust is being attributed to shadow banking. The origin belongs elsewhere.
The IMF’s Complaint Is Self-Incriminating
The IMF’s April 2024 Global Financial Stability Report concluded that private credit’s rapid growth and opacity warrant much closer regulatory oversight. The technical concerns are real: infrequent valuations, limited transparency, and interconnections between private funds and the regulated banking system through back-leverage structures are genuine vulnerabilities. The roughly $214 billion in bank loans extended to private credit funds means the supposed wall between shadow and regulated finance is partially illusory.
What the IMF does not address is its own role in building the conditions that made all of this inevitable. A decade of near-zero interest rates—pursued by central banks operating under frameworks the IMF endorsed—created both the supply pressure and the demand pull that inflated this market to its current scale. The Fund helped construct the distortion and now proposes to regulate the response to it. Each intervention creates the conditions that make the next seem necessary. The shadow does not shrink as the perimeter expands, it relocates.
What Honest Austrian Analysis Requires
The Austrian framework does not offer private credit a free pass. It offers a more accurate diagnosis than either its cheerleaders or its regulators are providing. Fund managers will tell you that private credit is relationship-driven, covenant-protected, and resilient through cycles. That was largely true of the asset class in 2015. It is considerably less true today, after a decade of capital inflows drove covenant standards from tighter than public markets to effectively indistinguishable from them. Competition for deals compressed the very protections that made direct lending attractive in the first place.
Regulators will tell you that more oversight and disclosure will make the system safer. But disclosure requirements will not reverse the structural distortions caused by suppressed interest rates, nor restore the covenant protections that competitive pressure eroded. They will redirect activity—as they always do—into whatever structures sit just outside the new perimeter.
What built the fragility now accumulating in private credit portfolios was not a lack of regulation. It was a decade of artificially-cheap money that compressed yield everywhere and forced capital into increasingly-marginal risks. The market grew because it served a genuine need the regulated system had abandoned. It accumulated risk because the price signal that should have constrained that growth—the interest rate—had been distorted beyond recognition. Fixing the signal would do more for financial stability than any disclosure regime. The wall produced the shadow. The central bank inflated the bubble inside it. Regulators are now proposing to build a bigger wall.