JP Morgan boss says more ‘cockroaches’ will emerge after private credit sector failures | JP Morgan

The boss of JP Morgan, Jamie Dimon, has warned over further losses linked to the private credit sector, saying more “cockroaches” could emerge after the collapse of the sub-prime auto lender Tricolor and the car parts supplier First Brands.

The bank said on Tuesday that although it had no exposure to First Brands, which sells car parts across the US, it had taken a $170m (£128m) hit from Tricolor, which collapsed amid fraud allegations last month.

Both firms had been backed by private credit within the so-called shadow banking sector, which is not directly regulated and is not forced to disclose the level of risks on their books. Regulated banks such as JP Morgan are exposed to the private credit sector, either by lending directly to private businesses, or lending to the private credit firms themselves.

The links between banks and private credit have raised concerns about the fallout of any downturn across the $3tn (£2.3tn) industry.

Dimon said further failures were likely to emerge. “My antenna goes up when things like that happen. I probably shouldn’t say this but when you see one cockroach, there’s probably more. And so everyone should be forewarned at this point,” he said during an analyst call.

When asked whether there were inherent risks in lending to the shadow banking sector, including private credit firms, Dimon said that it was a broad category but that weak links would be revealed during a downturn.

“These are very smart players: they know what they’re doing, they’ve been around a long time. But they’re not all very smart. And we don’t even know the standards of other banks [that] are underwriting to some of these entities. And I would suspect that some of those won’t be as good as you think.”

He suggested this would shake out as part of the normal credit cycle. “We’ve had a benign credit environment for so long, I think you may see credit in other places deteriorate more than other people think when in fact it’s a downturn. And hopefully it’ll be a fairly normal credit cycle … but we think we’re quite careful and obviously we scour the world for things we should be worried about.”

Dimon admitted that JP Morgan also made “mistakes” but said it made sure to “scour” its operations and detect any further risks when potential issues arose.

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