See private credit in All languages combined, or Wiktionary
{
"head_templates": [
{
"args": {
"1": "-"
},
"expansion": "private credit (uncountable)",
"name": "en-noun"
}
],
"lang": "English",
"lang_code": "en",
"pos": "noun",
"senses": [
{
"categories": [
{
"kind": "other",
"name": "English entries with incorrect language header",
"parents": [],
"source": "w"
},
{
"kind": "other",
"name": "Pages with 1 entry",
"parents": [],
"source": "w"
},
{
"kind": "other",
"name": "Pages with entries",
"parents": [],
"source": "w"
}
],
"coordinate_terms": [
{
"word": "public credit"
},
{
"word": "bond market"
},
{
"word": "bond"
},
{
"word": "private equity"
}
],
"examples": [
{
"text": "Holonym: shadow banking system"
},
{
"bold_text_offsets": [
[
787,
801
],
[
877,
891
],
[
1369,
1383
],
[
1484,
1498
]
],
"ref": "2026 March 2, Tom Saunders, “I smell a crash coming, says former Goldman Sachs boss: Ex-chief believes there are parallels to global financial crisis amid shadow banking concerns”, in The Telegraph:",
"text": "The man who led Goldman Sachs through the 2008 financial crash says he can “smell” a fresh crisis brewing. Lloyd Blankfein said he saw parallels to the global financial crisis and saw signs the economy was getting closer to a crash. “I wonder where there’s hidden secret leverage,” he said in an interview with Pablo Salame, Citadel’s co-chief investment officer. “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.” “It sort of smells like that kind of a moment again,” Mr Blankfein added. […] Mr Blankfein, who ran Goldman from 2006 until 2018, said the financial system appeared to be moving towards another catastrophe as a result of the boom in private credit, a corner of the market often referred to as shadow banking. He criticised private credit lenders for attempting to encourage retail access at a time when they are most unstable. “One has to worry about opaque assets where there’s illiquidity,” he told Bloomberg in a separate interview. “We’re getting close to the end of late stages of cycles on this and we’re due for a kind of a reckoning.” While tougher regulations for banks following the financial crisis have boosted their resilience, it has also pushed traditional lending activities towards shadow banking. Private credit lenders do not take deposits and so are not subject to the kind of strict regulations as banks. […] Private credit companies have increasingly been launching vehicles that allow ordinary investors to back the loans it extends to businesses.",
"type": "quotation"
}
],
"glosses": [
"An aspect of the shadow banking system involving assets defined by non-bank lending where the debt is not issued or traded on the public markets, unlike corporate bonds and municipal bonds."
],
"hypernyms": [
{
"word": "credit"
},
{
"word": "lending"
},
{
"word": "loan"
}
],
"id": "en-private_credit-en-noun-en:Q85794595",
"links": [
[
"shadow banking system",
"shadow banking system"
],
[
"asset",
"asset"
],
[
"bank",
"bank"
],
[
"lending",
"lending"
],
[
"debt",
"debt"
],
[
"corporate",
"corporate"
],
[
"municipal",
"municipal"
]
],
"raw_glosses": [
"(idiomatic) An aspect of the shadow banking system involving assets defined by non-bank lending where the debt is not issued or traded on the public markets, unlike corporate bonds and municipal bonds."
],
"related": [
{
"english": "not to be confused",
"translation": "not to be confused",
"word": "private banking"
},
{
"word": "privately held"
}
],
"senseid": [
"en:Q85794595"
],
"tags": [
"idiomatic",
"uncountable"
],
"wikidata": [
"Q85794595"
],
"wikipedia": [
"private credit"
]
}
],
"word": "private credit"
}
{
"head_templates": [
{
"args": {
"1": "-"
},
"expansion": "private credit (uncountable)",
"name": "en-noun"
}
],
"lang": "English",
"lang_code": "en",
"pos": "noun",
"related": [
{
"english": "not to be confused",
"translation": "not to be confused",
"word": "private banking"
},
{
"word": "privately held"
}
],
"senses": [
{
"categories": [
"English entries with incorrect language header",
"English idioms",
"English lemmas",
"English multiword terms",
"English nouns",
"English terms with quotations",
"English uncountable nouns",
"Pages with 1 entry",
"Pages with entries"
],
"coordinate_terms": [
{
"word": "public credit"
},
{
"word": "bond market"
},
{
"word": "bond"
},
{
"word": "private equity"
}
],
"examples": [
{
"text": "Holonym: shadow banking system"
},
{
"bold_text_offsets": [
[
787,
801
],
[
877,
891
],
[
1369,
1383
],
[
1484,
1498
]
],
"ref": "2026 March 2, Tom Saunders, “I smell a crash coming, says former Goldman Sachs boss: Ex-chief believes there are parallels to global financial crisis amid shadow banking concerns”, in The Telegraph:",
"text": "The man who led Goldman Sachs through the 2008 financial crash says he can “smell” a fresh crisis brewing. Lloyd Blankfein said he saw parallels to the global financial crisis and saw signs the economy was getting closer to a crash. “I wonder where there’s hidden secret leverage,” he said in an interview with Pablo Salame, Citadel’s co-chief investment officer. “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.” “It sort of smells like that kind of a moment again,” Mr Blankfein added. […] Mr Blankfein, who ran Goldman from 2006 until 2018, said the financial system appeared to be moving towards another catastrophe as a result of the boom in private credit, a corner of the market often referred to as shadow banking. He criticised private credit lenders for attempting to encourage retail access at a time when they are most unstable. “One has to worry about opaque assets where there’s illiquidity,” he told Bloomberg in a separate interview. “We’re getting close to the end of late stages of cycles on this and we’re due for a kind of a reckoning.” While tougher regulations for banks following the financial crisis have boosted their resilience, it has also pushed traditional lending activities towards shadow banking. Private credit lenders do not take deposits and so are not subject to the kind of strict regulations as banks. […] Private credit companies have increasingly been launching vehicles that allow ordinary investors to back the loans it extends to businesses.",
"type": "quotation"
}
],
"glosses": [
"An aspect of the shadow banking system involving assets defined by non-bank lending where the debt is not issued or traded on the public markets, unlike corporate bonds and municipal bonds."
],
"hypernyms": [
{
"word": "credit"
},
{
"word": "lending"
},
{
"word": "loan"
}
],
"links": [
[
"shadow banking system",
"shadow banking system"
],
[
"asset",
"asset"
],
[
"bank",
"bank"
],
[
"lending",
"lending"
],
[
"debt",
"debt"
],
[
"corporate",
"corporate"
],
[
"municipal",
"municipal"
]
],
"raw_glosses": [
"(idiomatic) An aspect of the shadow banking system involving assets defined by non-bank lending where the debt is not issued or traded on the public markets, unlike corporate bonds and municipal bonds."
],
"senseid": [
"en:Q85794595"
],
"tags": [
"idiomatic",
"uncountable"
],
"wikidata": [
"Q85794595"
],
"wikipedia": [
"private credit"
]
}
],
"word": "private credit"
}
Download raw JSONL data for private credit meaning in English (3.5kB)
This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable English dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2026-06-15 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2026-06-01 using wiktextract (03da280 and 7f4db16). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.
If you use this data in academic research, please cite Tatu Ylonen: Wiktextract: Wiktionary as Machine-Readable Structured Data, Proceedings of the 13th Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC), pp. 1317-1325, Marseille, 20-25 June 2022. Linking to the relevant page(s) under https://kaikki.org would also be greatly appreciated.