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Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Ex-Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein sounds alarm on private credit — warning it ‘smells’ like 2008

 Former Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein has warned that the growing private credit market could lead to a financial crisis similar to the one in 2008, potentially affecting retail investors and the broader economy.

In an interview on Bloomberg’s “Big Take” podcast, the renowned moneyman said the $1.8 trillion private credit sector involves risks from hidden leverage, lack of liquidity and opaque assets.

He compared the situation to the subprime mortgage crisis, noting that these investments are increasingly being offered to individual investors through retirement accounts.

Blankein warned that he sees a possible financial crisis brewing in the private credit market.Getty Images

“We’re getting close to the end of the late stages of cycles on this, and we’re due for a kind of a reckoning,” Blankfein said.

He expressed concern that firms are promoting these products to retail clients just as risks are rising.

Private credit refers to loans made by non-bank lenders to companies, often outside traditional regulatory oversight.

Recent issues include souring loans at firms like BlackRock and the insolvency of UK lender Market Financial Solutions last week, amid allegations of fraud and improperly pledged assets.

A 2025 executive order by President Donald Trump eased rules allowing private credit and equity investments in 401(k) plans.

Goldman Sachs, where Blankfein served as CEO from 2006 to 2018, has partnered with T. Rowe Price to offer such products to retirement savers.

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon recently criticized competitors for making risky loans to struggling companies, calling such moves “dumb things” that prioritize short-term gains over long-term stability.REUTERS

Blankfein pointed to parallels with 2008, saying: “I wonder where there’s hidden secret leverage.

“Now everyone says, ‘Oh, the world’s not leveraged.’ That’s exactly what everybody said in the mortgage crisis until you suddenly discover that there was a lot of mortgage risk in Iceland.”

He added: “It sort of smells like that kind of a moment again. I don’t feel the storm, but the horses are starting to whinny in the corral.”

Blankfein’s tenure at Goldman included navigating the 2008 crisis. In 2010, the bank paid $550 million to settle Securities and Exchange Commission charges over misleading investors on a subprime mortgage product, without admitting wrongdoing.

In testimony before Congress, Blankfein emphasized that Goldman’s clients were sophisticated institutions, not retail investors.

Blankfein, who steered Goldman Sachs through the 2008 financial crisis, infamously stated he and his fellow financiers were “doing God’s work” to justify the bank’s role in the economy and high employee pay.BLOOMBERG NEWS

The exec, now 71, warned that losses for individual investors could provoke strong regulatory and government responses.

“When you lose money for individual consumers — i.e., taxpayers and citizens — people in government get very, very upset. Regulators get very, very upset,” he told the Bloomberg podcast.

Other industry leaders share similar concerns.

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon recently criticized competitors for making risky loans to struggling companies, calling such moves “dumb things” that prioritize short-term gains over long-term stability.

Blankfein stepped down from Goldman Sachs in 2018 to be replaced by David Solomon.Getty Images

Markets showed signs of unease Friday, with the KBW Bank Index dropping the most since April, reflecting investor worries about private credit vulnerabilities.

Goldman Sachs has stated that its private credit funds for retail investors have low redemption risks and limited exposure to high-risk sectors like software firms affected by artificial intelligence.

The private credit market has grown rapidly as investors seek higher yields amid low interest rates. However, critics argue that reduced transparency and increasing retail access could amplify systemic risks if economic conditions worsen.

Regulators are monitoring the sector, but no major new restrictions have been imposed yet. Investors and policymakers are urged to watch for signs of stress, such as rising defaults or liquidity shortages.

https://nypost.com/2026/03/03/business/lloyd-blankfein-sounds-alarm-on-private-credit-warning-it-smells-like-2008/

Taxpayers will fork over more than $36K per child under NYC free 2-K pilot program

 Taxpayers will shell out more than $36,000 per tot for Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s free 2-K pilot program – roughly $13,000 more than the average cost of private child care, city officials acknowledged Tuesday.

Gov. Kathy Hochul allocated $73 million in state funding for the 2,000-seat pilot launching in the fall — or about $36,500 per tot — as the pair move toward fulfilling Mamdani’s promise of universal child care for all city kids from 6 weeks to 5 years old.

The two Democrats joined forces in Harlem Tuesday to announce the five school districts, mostly lower income and diverse neighborhoods, that will get the first shot at signing their little ones up for the freebie, previously dubbed “2-Care.”

Gov. Kathy Hochul answers questions from reporters after she and Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced the first four NYC communities set to receive free 2-K seats.Luiz C. Ribeiro for NY Post

“We’ve done such a good job managing our budget that we’re able to provide this new program in an enhanced way to have 2-year-old care in the city of New York, in addition to all the other investments we made throughout the state with current revenues,” Hochul said, standing next to Mamdani at the Sugar Hill Children’s Museum of Art & Storytelling.

The state will solely foot the bill that will balloon to $425 million by 2027 when 12,000 2-K seats become available across the city — with Hochul saying that funding will come from current tax revenues.

A clear funding plan has not been laid out for future years, but Hochul, who faces re-election in November, said the initiative would be an ongoing priority for her as long as she’s in office.

The program’s price tag is considerably higher than what families fork over on average each year to send their 18 month-to-2 year olds to child care centers across the five boroughs, according to a city comptroller’s office report citing 2024 figures.

Families pay about $23,400 for market-rate day care centers, the report released last year states.

The roll out took place in Sugar Hill.Luiz C. Ribeiro for NY Post

Overall, center-based care for infants and toddlers cost families an average of $26,000 per year, a 43% increase from 2019, the 2025 city comptroller report said.

A City Hall rep said that the amount that families pay for care didn’t necessarily equate what it costs to administer the program, but offered up no details about why the one run by the city would apparently be 55% more expensive per child. The spokesperson also couldn’t provide a breakdown of how the $73 million would be spent.

Mamdani and Hochul unveiled the new initiative for city 2-year-olds — along with a buildup of existing free pre-K and 3-K programs — within days of the Democratic socialist mayor starting his four-year term after his universal child care pitch helped fuel his astronomical political ascension.

In all, the expansion in early childhood programs will ultimately provide care for 100,000 more kids across the Empire State, officials have said. There are about 80,000 children aged 2 in the Big Apple currently, according to city health department data and the comptroller’s office

Free child care was a campaign promise of Mamdani.Luiz C. Ribeiro for NY Post

Mamdani lauded Hochul on Tuesday for fronting up the funds for the new handout even as he pleads with state lawmakers to raise taxes on millionaires to help plug a $5.4 billion gap in the city budget.

“We have long known that child care is a priority for the governor,” Mamdani said.

“It’s a priority for parents here in our city, and now it’s a priority in what we’re delivering.”

Parents who live in the chosen five districts — representing each borough save for Staten Island — will have access to the first-of-its-kind program regardless of income or immigration status, Mamdani said.

Those areas include:

  • School District 6: Washington Heights, Inwood, Hamilton Heights and parts of Manhattanville in Manhattan.
  • School District 10: Fordham, Belmont, Norwood, Marble Hill, Morris Heights, Riverdale, Spuyten Duyvil, Van Cortlandt Village, Kingsbridge, and parts of Kingsbridge Heights, Bedford Park, Mount Hope, Claremont- Bathgate and East Tremont in The Bronx.
  • School Districts 18 and 23: Canarsie, Rugby-Remsen Village, Brownsville, Ocean Hill and parts of East Flatbush- Farragut and Prospect Lefferts Garden-Wingate in Brooklyn.
  • School District 27: Ozone Park, South Ozone Park, Richmond Hill, Woodhaven, Howard Beach, Rockaways and parts Lindenwood and Springfield Gardens North in Queens.

The application process is expected to open over the summer.

Emmy Liss, the executive director of the Mayor’s Office of Child Care, said at a City Council hearing Monday that officials were partnering with current child care providers to help build the program up.

“We will be working with them this fall to make sure they are ready to operate,” she said.

https://nypost.com/2026/03/03/us-news/taxpayers-will-fork-over-more-than-36k-per-child-under-nyc-free-2-k-pilot-program/

US oil inventories reportedly up by 5.6M barrels

 Crude oil inventories in the United States climbed by 5.6 million barrels in the week that ended February 27, private data from the American Petroleum Institute (API) allegedly revealed on Tuesday.

In the reported week, distillate inventories reportedly rose by 516,000 barrels, while gasoline stockpiles decreased by 3.3 million barrels.

Meanwhile, reserves in Cushing, Oklahoma, allegedly increased by 1.5 million barrels during the same week.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/US-oil-inventories-reportedly-up-by-5.6M-barrels/65794050