A quiet tension has been building inside investment portfolios, and recent events in private credit are beginning to bring it into view. Reports of increased redemption requests across several large private credit funds have prompted inevitable questions about whether this is the start of something more akin to the 2008 sub-prime mortgage meltdown. There is little evidence, at least for now, of the kind of systemic fragility that defined the global financial crisis.
But that does not mean there is nothing to see. On the contrary, what these episodes reveal is a more subtle issue of a growing mismatch between how different parts of a portfolio behave. Over the past decade, institutional investors have steadily increased their exposure to private assets. On the surface, the appeal is tempting. Investments promising higher returns, diversification and insulation from the day-to-day emotional pressure of public markets. Unfortunately, they also come with constraints that are often underappreciated.
It is not that private assets are less liquid, it is that their liquidity is governed by rules. Investors face lockups, notice periods and limits on how much can be withdrawn at any given time. In many cases, valuations are updated infrequently, meaning that reported performance can lag reality. Public markets, on the other hand, have prices that adjust continuously and assets can be sold almost instantly. When these two worlds are combined in a single portfolio, the result is not just diversification. It is a blending of fundamentally different time horizons and liquidity assumptions.
This matters most when, as we have witnessed recently, investors begin to ask for their money back. Then the contrast becomes unavoidable. Gating mechanisms, now being deployed across parts of the private credit market, are a case in point. They are entirely rational from a fund management perspective, but they also force a moment of clarity. Liquidity is not always available on demand. There is also a valuation dimension to consider. A portfolio that mixes real-time pricing with sporadic estimates can give the impression of stability even as underlying risks build. What looks like resilience may actually be a function of infrequent measurement.
None of this implies an imminent crisis. Any comparison with the 2008 is misplaced. The leverage that amplified losses across the banking system is not present in the same way today. Capital in private markets is typically longer term and less prone to sudden withdrawal. Yet the absence of immediate danger should not lead to complacency. As allocations to private assets continue to rise, the need for better visibility becomes more pressing. Investors should be able to answer straightforward questions with confidence. For instance, how quickly can capital be accessed, what constraints apply, and how would the portfolio behave under stress?
At present, those answers have been much harder to obtain than they should be. The recent turbulence in private credit should therefore be seen less as a warning of collapse and more as a prompt for improvement. The future of portfolio construction will not involve choosing between public and private markets. It will depend on understanding how the two interact, particularly when it matters most. Illiquidity may not be the problem, but misunderstanding it is.










