UK banks and financial firms active in the burgeoning private credit market are stress-testing their systems against a “severe but plausible” scenario depicting a deep global recession, following a directive from the Bank of England.
The move comes amid growing concerns regarding the market’s potential risks to the broader economy.
A cohort of 46 entities, encompassing banks, pension funds, insurers, and asset managers, will participate in the exercise.
They are tasked with modelling the repercussions of a hypothetical five-year global macroeconomic shock and outlining their strategic responses.
The simulated crisis envisions widespread supply chain disruptions leading to a scarcity of hardware components for the technology sector, coupled with a sharp escalation in energy prices.
The resulting deep recession would see UK inflation soar to 7 per cent, interest rates climb to an identical 7 per cent, and the unemployment rate peak at 7.5 per cent.
The Bank said that under this scenario, the technology sector is severely impacted, and artificial intelligence (AI) development is hit by higher energy prices and hardware shortages.
The interim findings from the first stage of testing will be shared later this year, and a final report will be published in 2027.
The Bank said that the scenario was purely hypothetical and it was not forecasting such a shock.
But the stress test was designed to help the central bank identify potential risks linked to the private credit market, which has been subject to much less regulation and oversight than the traditional banking system.

This is despite total assets in private credit and equity funds soaring to $11 trillion (£8.3 trillion) over the past decade.
Concerns about the strength of the industry came to the fore in 2025 following the collapses of US auto parts firm First Brands and car dealer and lender Tricolor.
Private credit is a form of lending where businesses do not go to banks but to a private company and negotiate a deal.
Private equity typically refers to financing in return for a stake in a business.
