Episode
Private Credit Crisis? Unicus Founder Warns Retail Investors May Be Trapped
- Podcast
- Biz Talk Today TV
- Published
- Jun 3, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 1877
- Processing state
not_requested- Canonical source
- https://traffic.megaphone.fm/FPMN2581440490.mp3
Actions
POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/the-weekly-money-clip-6866050/episodes/private-credit-crisis-unicus-founder-warns-retail-investors-may-be-trapped-2/transcription-requests
Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode.GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/the-weekly-money-clip-6866050/private-credit-crisis-unicus-founder-warns-retail-investors-may-be-trapped-2.md
Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource.
Summary
Is private credit becoming the next major risk hiding in plain sight? On this episode of The Money Path, host Todd M. Schoenberger sits down with Laks Ganapathi, Founder of Unicus Research, to discuss why investors may be underestimating the risks lurking inside today's booming private credit market. As Wall Street continues pouring billions into private lending strategies, Laks delivers a sobering assessment of the asset class, arguing that many retail investors do not fully understand the tradeoffs they're making when investing in illiquid private credit funds. 💥 Key Topics Include: • Why private credit may not be suitable for most retail investors • The hidden dangers of redemption gates and limited liquidity • Why investors should assume the fund's time horizon—not their own • The growing credibility crisis facing the private credit industry • How difficult it is to accurately value illiquid private loans • The risks created by synthetic risk transfers and off-balance-sheet exposures • Why banks continue moving risk away from traditional balance sheets • The HSBC loss tied to private credit exposure and what it means for investors • Mortgage fraud, valuation concerns, and growing transparency issues • Why Laks believes even accredited investors should keep private credit exposure extremely limited • What regulation, mark-to-market pricing, and transparency reforms could mean for the future of the industry Laks also explains why private credit will likely remain a permanent asset class, but argues that greater transparency and investor protections are essential if confidence in the sector is to be restored. If you're investing in private credit funds, alternative investments, private debt, BDCs, interval funds, or non-traded products, this is a conversation you cann…