First Brands bankruptcy sparks sharp outflow from US loan funds

5 hours ago 1

First Brands products displayed for sale in Medford

Fram oil filters, manufactured by the auto parts maker First Brands, are displayed for sale in Medford, Massachusetts, U.S., October 21, 2025. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab

Oct 22 (Reuters) - U.S. loan funds are seeing sharp outflows this month as the bankruptcy of First Brands Group raises concerns over opaque financing and the robustness of underwriting standards in the private credit market.

Loan exchange-traded funds, which invest in syndicated loans that are often bundled into collateralized loan obligations (CLOs), saw about $1.5 billion in outflows in October — their first monthly withdrawal in six months, according to Lipper data.

Sign up here.

Shows monthly flows into U.S. loan exchange-traded funds

"Investors are finally starting to question the loose underwriting in the loan market, driven by massive inflows into both private credit and broadly syndicated loans," Jeffrey Rosenkranz, portfolio manager at Shelton Tactical Credit Fund, said.

He said he expected early defaults tied to fraud would give way to broader distress among weaker businesses and poorly managed firms as the credit cycle progressed.

The collapse of First Brands and subprime auto lender Tricolor has unsettled parts of Wall Street’s multitrillion-dollar credit market, which includes leveraged loans, CLOs, trade-finance funds and asset-backed auto lending.

The bankruptcies have already triggered losses at major financial firms. JPMorgan called its $170 million charge tied to Tricolor “not our finest moment,” while Jefferies’ CEO said the firm was defrauded by First Brands.

A spokesperson for First Brands' CEO said on October 10 he was evaluating the best path forward to help maximize value for its customers, suppliers, employees and lenders.

Shows top 5 outflows among U.S. Loan Funds in October

Reporting by Patturaja Murugaboopathy; Editing by Alison Williams

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

Read Entire Article