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ECB broadens private credit scrutiny as bank exposures comes under closer review

The European Central Bank has expanded its examination of banks’ links to the private credit sector, widening the scope of its supervisory review amid growing concerns about transparency and risk aggregation across the industry, according to a report by Bloomberg.

The report cites unnamed people familiar with the matter as revealing that more than 20 banks are now included in the ECB’s latest information-gathering exercise, up from around a dozen in prior assessments. Institutions with more material exposure will be required to provide detailed reporting on an annual basis going forward, reflecting heightened supervisory focus on the sector.

The move comes as private credit markets face increased investor scrutiny following instances of funds introducing restrictions on redemptions. Regulators are particularly focused on how banks capture and monitor indirect exposures to the asset class, especially where lending relationships overlap with non-bank credit providers.

Although overall exposure in Europe remains relatively modest compared with the United States, the sector is highly concentrated among a small group of large lenders. Deutsche Bank, Barclays, BNP Paribas and HSBC collectively account for the majority of disclosed exposure, though this still represents a small proportion of their total loan books.

ECB officials have emphasised that while current risk levels appear contained, the pace of growth in private credit-linked activity warrants closer monitoring. Supervisors are increasingly concerned not only with the absolute size of exposures, but also with banks’ ability to identify interconnected risks across funds, borrowers and co-lending structures.

Regulators have pointed to weaknesses in how institutions aggregate and map these exposures, noting that gaps in risk identification could obscure concentrations and correlations that become more material under stressed market conditions.

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