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The real risk is not in the Middle East, but within the financial system itself.
These days, the market is focused on geopolitical conflicts, but there’s a more important clue that’s being overlooked: the American insurance industry is accumulating an “invisible mine.”
Currently, U.S. insurance funds have nearly $1 trillion allocated to private credit. But the issue isn’t the scale—it’s the “safety” of these assets—which may be systematically overestimated.
The core problem lies in the rating system.
Regulators have sampled and found that the vast majority of private credit ratings are higher than internal assessments, even with cases where “junk-rated assets are rated as investment grade,” with deviations as high as six levels. More importantly, this report was subsequently taken down and has not been publicly released again.
Why is this happening?
First, private credit itself lacks transparency, and ratings are only circulated internally, making external supervision nearly impossible.
Second, smaller rating agencies are more aggressive, more likely to give high scores to win business.
Third, insurance companies rely on these ratings to reduce capital requirements, essentially “optimizing financial statements.”
The result is—
Assets that appear safe are actually carrying higher real risks.
The real danger here is:
Once the credit environment reverses, and defaults begin to spread, the problem won’t slowly unwind; it could jump directly from “underestimated” to “concentrated exposure.”
This is not an issue with a single asset but a structural problem.
A key point:
This round of risk isn’t about bad assets; it’s about “risk being packaged as safety.”
My take:
This is very similar to 2008, but even more covert. It won’t explode in the short term, but once triggered, it will cause a chain reaction. The market is currently watching visible conflicts, but what truly needs attention are these underestimated credit risks. One sentence: the mine is already planted, it just hasn’t detonated yet.
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