Updated March 30th 2026, 10:37 IST

The global financial system is facing three simultaneous and poorly understood crises - private credit fragility, an unprecedented energy disruption, and stressed bond markets. We don't understand the scale or interaction of these. It could be ‘2007 leading to a full blown 2008’ along with a Dot Com Crash 2.0 thrown in for good measure.
Notably, there is no equivalent of a Paul Volcker figure in 2026 to decisively tackle inflationary pressures.
Compounding these stresses is massive AI capital expenditure, which has already strained financial markets. These investments are built on high valuations driven by ‘this time is different’ narratives, adding another layer of vulnerability.
At the same time, distressed debt investors are calling this the biggest opportunity since 2008.
The broader picture resembles a convergence of past crises: the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997, the Dot Com bust, the 1973 OPEC shock, and the 2008 Global Financial Crisis.
The signals are sobering. Early warning indicators suggest that the global financial architecture and its underlying plumbing are under significant strain.
Even with a rapid truce and a push toward normalisation, private credit and AI-related risks will remain key challenges through 2026. In the event of a prolonged Iran conflict, however, the outlook becomes far more uncertain - at that point, all bets are off.
Published March 30th 2026, 07:58 IST