Mohamed El-Erian, Allianz chief economic adviser, is pointing to widening cracks in private credit markets. He said the signs mirror JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon‘s earlier “cockroach” warning — and more “bugs” are now in plain sight.

El-Erian Raises the Termite Question

El-Erian wrote on X on Friday that this week’s private credit news “echoes Jamie Dimon’s recent warning about ‘cockroaches’—the idea that early signs of excesses are likely to be followed by others.”

He listed “valuation gaps and liquidity strains to poor underwriting and fraud” as the “bugs” now emerging.

Then he sharpened the concern: “The big question for markets and the real economy is whether we’re just dealing with cockroaches… or are these termites posing systemic risks?”

El-Erian said he suspects it isn’t a systemic termite issue alone. But he urged investors to watch how private credit interacts with other risks — including “elements of an AI bubble” and “vulnerabilities in certain segments of the global bond market.”

Blue Owl Capital Becomes the Crisis Face

Blue Owl Capital Inc. (NYSE:OWL) is down over 34.59% year-to-date. Shares have fallen 48.27% over the past year.

In February, Blue Owl announced it would liquidate $1.4 billion in assets to return capital to exiting investors. CEO Craig Packer called it a “strategic transaction.”

Dimon’s Warning and Lipschultz’s Clap-Back

Dimon likened credit bankruptcies to spotting a cockroach — if you see one, more are likely lurking. El‑Erian echoed the warning earlier in a CNBC interview, saying, "Cockroaches don't come in ones and twos."

Blue Owl co-CEO Marc Lipschultz pushed back. Speaking at the CAIS Alternative Investment Summit, he quipped: “There might be a lot more cockroaches at JPMorgan.” He called broad concern “an odd kind of fear-mongering.”

The debate was lit by the bankruptcies of First Brands Group and Tricolor Holdings, two events that rattled investors and slammed regional bank stocks.

Wider Cracks Across Private Credit

BlackRock Inc. (NYSE:BLK) slashed a private loan to Infinite Commerce from 100 cents to zero in just three months, per Bloomberg. That par-to-zero swing exposed the lag between reported valuations and real performance.

Apollo Global Management Inc. (NYSE:APO) and KKR & Co. Inc. (NYSE:KKR) have also faced monthly losses as software-heavy portfolios draw scrutiny.

New York Life Investments, in a February report, said the sector remains prone to headline risk but maintained a constructive outlook. It called for investors to prioritize selectivity, strong underwriting, and disciplined exposure.

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