
Wall Street just built a weapon to destroy itself, and the names on the target list should terrify you.
JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America and Barclays assembled a new index last week, one that rises in value the closer these firms get to collapse. They called it CDX Financials and they're selling it to hedge funds right now. The firms listed inside it are some of the biggest names in American finance, Blackstone, Apollo, Ares Management, MetLife, and Jefferies Financial Group. Their stocks have been in freefall since January down anywhere from 27 to 43 percent in just a few months. This isn't a stock market correction but rather a unwinding of a $3 trillion shadow banking system that replaced your local bank after the 2008 financial crisis. Private credit, loans made not by banks, but by these giant investment firms became the lifeblood of thousands of American companies. It was the hottest trade on Wall Street for five straight years, minting billionaires and generating returns that made traditional finance look boring. Then the losses started showing up.The trigger wasn't a single bank run or a housing crash but rather AI. These firms had lent hundreds of billions of dollars to software companies, and then AI started making those software companies obsolete almost overnight. Suddenly, the loans couldn't be repaid. Suddenly, the investors who had poured money into these private credit funds wanted their money back, all at once. Apollo approved only 45 cents on the dollar for investors trying to get out. Ares, Blackstone, and Blue Owl quietly capped withdrawals too. In the first quarter of 2026 alone, investors demanded $20.8 billion back, and the funds couldn't give it to them.Now the same banks that helped build this machine are selling the tools to tear it down. When JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs create a product specifically designed to profit from these firms failing, that is not a hedge. The people who understand the plumbing of this system best have decided it is safer to bet against it than to stand inside it. The last time Wall Street built instruments like this around a collapsing asset class, it was 2007, and the product was called a credit default swap on mortgage bonds.Source: StockMarket.News
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