Economic news

Deutsche Bank Highlights Private Credit Risks as Portfolio Grows

FRANKFURT, March 12 (Reuters) - Deutsche Bank said on Thursday that its private credit portfolio grew around ​6% to nearly 26 billion euros ($30.05 ‌billion) in 2025 as it highlighted risks to the headline-grabbing sector.

The disclosure, made in the bank's ​annual report, comes as investor worries ​mount for the $2 trillion industry over deteriorating credit ⁠quality.

"Failures of a select number of ​sub-prime lenders in the U.S. increased investor ​focus on risks associated with private credit and raised wider concerns around underwriting standards and fraud risk," ​Deutsche Bank said.

Deutsche said it applies "conservative underwriting ​standards" to its portfolio, which rose from 24.5 billion ‌euros ⁠in 2024.

Germany's largest lender said it was not exposed to significant risks but "the bank could face potential indirect credit risks through ​interconnected portfolios ​and counterparties".

Regulators ⁠have flagged concerns about banks' exposure to private credit in ​part because disclosures are scant.

Private credit ​has ⁠been marred by concerns about deteriorating credit quality and exposure to the software sector - an ⁠industry ​seen as ripe for ​disruption by advances in artificial intelligence.

($1 = 0.8653 euros)

Reporting by ​Tom Sims and Matthias Inverardi Editing by Tomasz Janowski

Source: Reuters


To leave a comment you must or Join us


More news


Back to economic news list

By visiting our website and services, you agree to the conditions of use of cookies. Learn more
I agree