
Alpha Exchange Ian Harnett, Co-Founder and Chief Investment Strategist, Absolute Strategy Research
Dec 19, 2025
Ian Harnett, Co-founder and Chief Investment Strategist at Absolute Strategy Research, discusses the shifting landscape of systemic financial risks, emphasizing the growing dominance of non-banks like private equity-backed insurers. He highlights how these entities often hold riskier assets and have lower capital buffers. Ian also explains that systemic risk can multiply through smaller critical nodes rather than large institutions, stressing the importance of cash flow in assessing vulnerability and warning about potential illiquidity in private credit markets.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Small Nodes Can Topple The System
- Systemic risk is multiplicative, not additive, so small nodes can trigger cascading failures.
- Regulating only the biggest firms misses vulnerable smaller nodes that can take the system to zero.
Non-Banks Now Drive US Finance
- The US financial system is now dominated by non-banks, which control about 73% of private-sector financial assets.
- That shift changes how shocks propagate and makes non-bank behavior critically important.
PE-Owned Insurers Amplify Risk
- Private-equity-owned insurers take on riskier assets, allocate more to private credit, and often hold lower capital buffers.
- These insurers can amplify stress, especially during fire-sale events.
