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The World’s Top 10 Banks in 2025: Power, Risk, and the New Financial Order

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China’s trillion-dollar banking giants dominate global finance—but their real estate exposure could reshape the entire system

The global banking landscape has reached an inflection point. As we close 2025, the world’s 100 largest banks control $95.5 trillion in assets—a figure that eclipses the GDP of most nations combined. Yet beneath this staggering concentration of financial power lies a paradox that should concern policymakers and investors alike: the banks with the biggest balance sheets may not be the most resilient.

Four Chinese state-owned institutions—Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Agricultural Bank of China, China Construction Bank, and Bank of China—occupy the top spots in the global rankings by total assets. Meanwhile, JPMorgan Chase, the largest U.S. bank and fifth globally, commands the highest market capitalization at nearly $788 billion, signaling that investors value American banking efficiency over sheer size.

This divergence tells us something critical: in 2025’s banking world, scale and strength are no longer synonymous.

The Rankings: Size Doesn’t Equal Safety

Based on the latest data from S&P Global Market Intelligence and financial reports through Q4 2024, here are the world’s ten largest banks by total assets:

1. Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) – $6.6 trillion in assets. The world’s largest bank by assets continues to benefit from Beijing’s infrastructure spending and state support, operating over 16,000 branches globally. Yet non-performing loan ratios are forecast to rise to 5.4-5.8% in 2025-2027, up from 5.1% in 2024, driven primarily by real estate exposure.

2. Agricultural Bank of China – Approximately $5.8 trillion. Deeply embedded in rural China’s financial system, ABC faces similar real estate headwinds while supporting Beijing’s rural development priorities.

3. China Construction Bank – Around $5.6 trillion. As its name suggests, CCB’s fortunes are intimately tied to China’s construction sector, making it particularly vulnerable to the ongoing property crisis.

4. Bank of China – Approximately $4.8 trillion. The most internationally oriented of China’s “Big Four,” with significant foreign operations, yet still carrying substantial domestic real estate exposure.

5. JPMorgan Chase – $4.0 trillion in assets. The most profitable large bank globally, JPMorgan’s return on equity reached 18% in 2024, demonstrating that American banks achieve more with less. With 5,021 domestic branches and sophisticated digital platforms, JPMorgan exemplifies the “smaller but mightier” model.

6. Bank of America – $2.65 trillion. The second-largest U.S. bank maintains 3,624 domestic branches and has aggressively invested in digital banking, serving millions through its AI-powered virtual assistant Erica.

7. HSBC Holdings – $3.0 trillion. Europe’s largest bank by assets, HSBC is navigating a strategic pivot toward Asia while managing legacy exposures across its global footprint.

8. BNP Paribas – Approximately $2.9 trillion. France’s largest bank and a European leader in investment banking and corporate finance.

9. Crédit Agricole – Around $2.6 trillion. Another French banking giant with significant retail and corporate banking operations across Europe.

10. Citigroup – $1.84 trillion. Once the world’s largest bank, Citi has streamlined operations but maintains an unparalleled global presence with operations in 109 foreign branches.

The Elephant in the Boardroom: China’s Real Estate Time Bomb

Here’s what the asset rankings don’t show: Chinese banks’ exposure to real estate loans has created systemic vulnerabilities, with non-performing asset ratios for property development loans potentially reaching 7% by 2027 if markets stabilize—and much worse if they don’t.

Walk through any major Chinese city today and you’ll see the problem in concrete and steel: unfinished apartment towers, silent construction sites, and the ghostly remains of a $52 trillion property bubble that’s now deflating. Chinese policymakers removed price caps on housing in 2024, allowing eligible families to buy unlimited homes in suburban areas, a desperate attempt to revive demand that has largely failed.

The human cost is staggering. Mid-2025 data shows mortgage non-performing loan rates at listed banks rising overall, with some banks up more than 20 basis points. Millions of Chinese homeowners now hold “underwater” mortgages—properties worth less than their outstanding loans. Some have lost both their homes and down payments yet still owe banks hundreds of thousands of yuan.

For the Big Four Chinese banks, this isn’t just a loan quality issue—it’s an existential question. Banks’ exposure to housing and local government debt declined to 20.7% in Q4 2024 from 22.2% a year earlier, but that still represents trillions in potentially troubled assets. Beijing’s response? Issuing 500 billion yuan in special treasury bonds in 2025 to support bank recapitalization.

Think about that for a moment. The government that owns these banks is now having to inject capital into them to cover losses from lending that the government itself encouraged. It’s a circular firing squad of state capitalism.

American Excellence: Smaller, Smarter, More Profitable

Cross the Pacific and the banking model looks radically different. JPMorgan Chase’s annualized return on equity for Q2 2025 was 16.93%, a performance Chinese banks can only dream of. With roughly $4 trillion in assets—a third of ICBC’s size—JPMorgan generated comparable or superior profits through better risk management, superior technology, and diversified revenue streams.

American banks aren’t perfect. They face their own challenges: rising commercial real estate defaults, regulatory uncertainty around the Basel III endgame rules, and fierce competition from fintech disruptors. Yet their fundamental business model—strict capital requirements, transparent accounting, and market discipline—creates resilience.

The regulatory framework matters enormously. Basel III requires banks to maintain a minimum Common Equity Tier 1 ratio at all times, plus a mandatory capital conservation buffer equivalent to at least 2.5% of risk-weighted assets. U.S. implementation has been stricter than in many jurisdictions, forcing American banks to hold more capital but also making them genuinely safer.

Compare this to China, where banks have remained cautious about new property exposure, transferring housing risks to non-bank financial institutions. That’s not risk management—that’s risk concealment. The leverage doesn’t disappear; it just moves to less regulated corners of the financial system.

The Digital Divide: Innovation as the New Moat

Size and capital strength matter, but in 2025, technological sophistication increasingly separates winners from also-rans. DBS Bank’s AI investments are projected to reach 750 million Singapore dollars (about $577 million) in 2024 and surpass SG$1 billion in 2025. The Singapore-based bank has deployed over 1,500 AI and machine learning models across 370 use cases, from corporate risk assessment to customer service.

JPMorgan and Bank of America aren’t far behind. BofA’s Erica virtual assistant has handled billions of customer interactions, while JPMorgan uses AI for everything from fraud detection to trading strategies. Only 8% of banks were developing generative AI systematically in 2024, with 78% taking a tactical approach, but that’s changing rapidly.

The Chinese banks? They’re investing heavily in digital infrastructure, to be sure. Yet their technology serves a fundamentally different purpose: facilitating state-directed lending, monitoring transactions for political purposes, and supporting Beijing’s social credit systems. Innovation, yes—but innovation in service of control rather than customer value.

European banks occupy an uncomfortable middle ground. BBVA’s expansion of its OpenAI collaboration will see ChatGPT Enterprise rolled out to all 120,000 global employees, signaling serious AI ambitions. Yet European banks collectively lag their American and Asian peers in both investment and implementation.

Basel III Endgame: The Regulatory Reckoning

Speaking of uncomfortable positions, let’s address the regulatory elephant: the Basel III endgame. Under the original proposal, large banks would begin transitioning to the new framework on July 1, 2025, with full compliance starting July 1, 2028. The proposal would have resulted in an aggregate 16% increase in common equity tier 1 capital requirements for affected bank holding companies.

But here’s the twist: US regulators recently proposed to reduce capital requirements on the largest banks, bowing to intense industry lobbying and political pressure. The revised proposal now calls for only a 9% increase for global systemically important banks—still significant, but less onerous than originally planned.

This compromise may prove disastrous. The average leverage ratio of US global systemically important banks declined from a 2016 peak of 9% to about 7% in 2023 and has remained there. Banks have been gaming the system, increasing risk exposure while maintaining superficially healthy risk-weighted capital ratios.

Meanwhile, the European Central Bank and Bank of England have delayed their Basel III implementation, citing US inaction. We’re witnessing a potential regulatory race to the bottom—exactly what the Basel framework was designed to prevent.

The Geopolitical Wildcard: Trade, Tariffs, and Banking Stress

Banking doesn’t happen in a vacuum. International trade disputes and changes in tariffs are expected to influence the performance of banks, impacting asset quality and growth potential. If U.S.-China trade tensions escalate further—a real possibility given recent political developments—Chinese banks will feel the pain first and hardest.

Reciprocal tariffs between the US and China are exerting pressure on Chinese banks, particularly due to declining demand from export-oriented manufacturers. When factories close or cut production, loan defaults follow. It’s Economics 101, but at a scale that could destabilize the entire Chinese banking system.

American banks have their own trade exposure, of course, but it’s more diversified and often hedged. JPMorgan operates in over 100 countries. Citi, despite its shrinking footprint, remains the most truly global bank. They have options. Chinese banks, despite their size, remain heavily dependent on the domestic economy.

What This Means for 2026 and Beyond

So where does this leave us? Here’s my take, informed by twenty years covering this beat:

First, asset size is an increasingly misleading metric. ICBC’s $6.6 trillion balance sheet looks impressive until you examine what’s actually on it. Quality trumps quantity, and American banks demonstrate this daily through superior profitability and resilience.

Second, the Chinese banking system faces a reckoning. It’s not a matter of if, but when and how severe. Chinese banks were sitting on 3.2 trillion yuan ($440 billion) worth of bad loans by the end of September—a 33% increase from pre-Covid times. These numbers, from the banks themselves, are almost certainly understated.

Third, technology is creating a two-tier banking world. Banks that aggressively adopt AI, blockchain, and advanced analytics will dominate. Those that don’t will become utilities—low-margin, heavily regulated, and perpetually vulnerable to disruption.

Fourth, regulatory arbitrage is back with a vengeance. The Basel III endgame was supposed to eliminate it. Instead, we’re seeing regulators water down requirements in response to bank lobbying. This should terrify anyone who remembers 2008.

Finally, geopolitics increasingly dictates banking success. In an era of great power competition, owning a bank in Shanghai or New York means different things. Chinese banks serve the state; American banks serve shareholders (at least theoretically). European banks are caught in between, trying to navigate relationships with both powers while maintaining independence.

The Billion-Dollar Question

Here’s what keeps me up at night: We’ve seen this movie before. Massive banks, seemingly too big to fail, carrying hidden risks that regulators either can’t see or choose to ignore. Policymakers convinced that “this time is different” because of better capital rules, smarter supervision, or more sophisticated risk management.

It never is.

The difference in 2025 is that the risks are concentrated in banks that operate under fundamentally different rules. When—not if—the Chinese property crisis forces Beijing to choose between bank bailouts and economic growth, the ripples will reach far beyond Asia.

The world’s largest 100 banks account for $95.5 trillion in assets, up 3% year over year. That’s growth, yes, but it’s also concentration. Too much power, in too few hands, making too many bets on too few assumptions.

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan, likes to say his bank could survive another 2008-style crisis. He’s probably right—JPMorgan is genuinely well-capitalized and well-managed. But could the global financial system survive a crisis originating in China’s $6 trillion banking sector?

That’s the question that should haunt every central banker and finance minister. Because in 2025, we’re not just worried about banks that are too big to fail. We’re worried about banks that are too big, too opaque, and too politically connected for anyone to fully understand the risks they carry.

The world’s top ten banks in 2025 aren’t just financial institutions. They’re nodes in a global system where everyone’s connected to everyone else through invisible chains of credit, derivatives, and counterparty risk. Pull one thread, and you might unravel the whole sweater.

Sleep tight.


The author is a Senior Opinion Columnist specializing in global finance and policy. Views expressed are personal.

Analysis

The Trump Coin and Lessons from the Ostrogoths: How a Gold Offering Reveals the Limits of Presidential Power Over America’s Money

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By the time the U.S. Mint strikes the first 24-karat gold Trump commemorative coin later this year, the great American tradition of keeping living politicians off the nation’s money will have been quietly, but spectacularly, circumvented.

Approved unanimously on March 19, 2026, by the Trump-appointed Commission of Fine Arts, the coin is ostensibly a celebration of the nation’s 250th anniversary. Yet, it serves a secondary, more visceral purpose for its chief architect: projecting executive dominance. The design is unapologetically aggressive. The obverse features President Donald Trump leaning intensely over the Resolute Desk, fists clenched, with the word “LIBERTY” arcing above his head and the dual dates “1776–2026” flanking him. The reverse bears a bald eagle, talons braced, ready to take flight.

Predictably, the political theater has been deafening. Critics have decried the coin as monarchic symbolism, pointing out that since the days of George Washington, the republic has fiercely guarded its currency against the vanity of living rulers. Defenders hail it as a masterstroke of patriotic fundraising and commemorative artistry.

But beneath the partisan noise lies a profound economic irony. In the grand sweep of monetary history, a leader plastering his face on ceremonial gold does not signal absolute control over a nation’s wealth. Quite the opposite. As we look back to the shifting empires of late antiquity, such numismatic pageantry usually reveals the exact opposite: a leader attempting to mask the uncomfortable reality of his limited sovereignty.

To understand the true weight of the 2026 Trump gold coin, one must look not to the halls of the Federal Reserve, but to the 6th-century courts of the Ostrogothic kings of Italy.

The Loophole of Vanity: 31 U.S.C. § 5112

To grasp the limits of the President’s monetary power, one must first look at the legal acrobatics required to mint the coin in the first place.

Federal law strictly forbids the portrait of a living person on circulating U.S. currency—a tradition born from the Founding Fathers’ revulsion for the coinage of King George III. To bypass this, the administration utilized the authorities granted under 31 U.S.C. § 5112, specifically the Treasury’s broad discretion to issue gold bullion and commemorative coins that do not enter general circulation.

While the coin bears a nominal face value of $1, it is a piece of bullion, not a medium of exchange. You cannot buy a coffee with it; it will not alter the M2 money supply; it will not shift the consumer price index.

Herein lies the central paradox of the Trump Semiquincentennial coin:

  • The Facade of Power: It utilizes the highest-purity gold and the official imprimatur of the United States Mint to project executive authority.
  • The Reality of Policy: The actual levers of the American economy—interest rates, quantitative easing, and the health of the fiat dollar—remain stubbornly out of the Oval Office’s direct control, residing instead with the independent Federal Reserve.

This dynamic—where a ruler uses localized, symbolic coinage to project a sovereignty he does not fully possess over the broader economic system—is not a modern invention. It is a historical hallmark of limited power.

Echoes from Ravenna: The Ostrogothic Parallel

When the Western Roman Empire collapsed in the late 5th century, Italy fell under the dominion of the Ostrogoths. The most famous of their rulers, Theodoric the Great, commanded the peninsula with formidable military might from his capital in Ravenna. He was, for all practical purposes, the king of Italy.

Yet, when you examine Ostrogothic coinage from this era, a fascinating picture of deference and limitation emerges.

Despite his military supremacy, Theodoric understood that the true center of global economic gravity lay to the east, in Constantinople. The Byzantine Emperor controlled the solidus—the gold standard of the Mediterranean world. If Theodoric wanted his kingdom to participate in international trade, he had to play by Byzantine monetary rules.

Consequently, the Ostrogoths minted gold and silver coins that were essentially counterfeits of Byzantine money. They bore the portrait of the reigning Eastern Emperor (such as Anastasius or Justinian), not the Ostrogothic king. Theodoric restricted his own branding to a modest monogram, and later kings, like Theodahad, only dared to place their full portraits on the bronze follis—the low-value base metal used for buying bread in local markets, entirely decoupled from international high finance.

The lesson from the Ostrogoths is clear, and widely recognized in peer-reviewed numismatic scholarship: controlling the territory is not the same as controlling the currency. The Ostrogoths used their local mints to project an image of continuity and authority to their immediate subjects, but they bowed to the monetary hegemony of the true empire.

The Byzantine Emperor of Modern Finance

Today, the “Constantinople” of the global economy is not a rival nation, but the institutional apparatus of the fiat dollar system—chiefly, the Federal Reserve and the global bond market.

President Trump has frequently chafed against this reality. Throughout his political career, he has sought to blur the lines of Fed independence, occasionally demanding lower interest rates or criticizing the Fed Chair with a ferocity normally reserved for political rivals. Yet, the institutional firewalls have largely held. The President cannot unilaterally dictate the cost of capital. He cannot force the world to buy U.S. Treasuries.

Thus, the 24-karat commemorative coin acts as his modern bronze follis.

It is a stunning piece of metal, but it is ultimately a domestic token. It satisfies a base of political supporters and projects an aura of monarchic permanence, just as Theodahad’s portrait did in the markets of Rome. But it does not challenge the underlying hegemony of the independent central banking system. The global markets, the sovereign wealth funds, and the algorithmic trading desks—the modern equivalents of the Byzantine merchants—will ignore the gold coin entirely. They will continue to trade in the invisible, digital fiat dollars over which the President exercises only indirect influence.

The Illusion of Monetary Sovereignty

What, then, does the “Trump coin” tell us about the current state of American executive power?

First, it highlights a growing preference for the aesthetics of power over the mechanics of governance. Minting a gold coin with one’s face on it is a frictionless exercise in executive privilege. Reining in a multi-trillion-dollar deficit, negotiating complex trade pacts, or carefully managing a soft economic landing are laborious, constrained, and often unrewarding tasks.

Second, it reveals the resilience of America’s financial architecture. That the President must resort to a commemorative loophole—utilizing a non-circulating bullion designation to bypass the strictures of circulating fiat—is a testament to the fact that the core of America’s money remains insulated from populist whim.

Consider the implications for dollar hegemony:

  • Global Confidence: International investors rely on the U.S. dollar precisely because it is not subject to the immediate, emotional control of the executive branch.
  • Institutional Friction: The outcry over the coin, while loud, proves that democratic norms regarding the separation of leader and state apparatus are still fiercely defended in the public square.
  • The Paradox of Gold: By choosing gold—the traditional refuge of those who distrust government fiat—the administration inadvertently highlights its own lack of faith in the very paper currency it is sworn to manage.

Conclusion: The Weight of Empty Gold

The Roman historian Cassius Dio once observed that you can judge the health of a republic by the faces on its coins. When the republic falls, the faces of magistrates are replaced by the faces of autocrats.

But history is rarely that simple. The Ostrogothic kings of the 6th century put their faces on bronze because they lacked the power to control the gold. In March 2026, an American president has put his face on gold because he lacks the power to control the fiat.

The Semiquincentennial Trump coin is destined to be a remarkable collector’s item, a flashpoint in the culture wars, and a brilliant piece of political marketing. But when historians look back on the numismatics of the 2020s, they will not see a president who conquered the American monetary system. They will see a leader who, much like the kings of late antiquity, had to settle for a brilliant, golden simulacrum of power, while the true economic empire hummed along, indifferent and out of reach.

FAQ: Understanding the 2026 Commemorative Coin and U.S. Monetary Policy

Is it legal for a living U.S. President to be on a coin? Yes, but only under specific circumstances. By law (31 U.S.C. § 5112), living persons cannot be depicted on circulating currency (like standard pennies, quarters, or paper bills). However, the U.S. Mint has the authority to produce non-circulating bullion and commemorative coins. The 2026 Trump coin exploits this loophole as a non-circulating commemorative piece.

Does the U.S. President control the value of the dollar? No. While presidential policies (like tariffs, taxation, and government spending) affect the broader economy, the direct control of the U.S. money supply and interest rates rests with the Federal Reserve, an independent central bank. The President appoints the Fed Chair, but cannot legally dictate the bank’s day-to-day monetary policy.

What is the historical significance of the Ostrogothic coinage parallel? In the 6th century, Ostrogothic kings in Italy minted gold coins bearing the face of the Byzantine Emperor, while reserving their own portraits for lower-value bronze coins. This demonstrated that while they held local, symbolic power, true economic sovereignty belonged to the Byzantine Empire. The 2026 Trump coin operates similarly: it offers localized symbolic prestige, but the actual “engine” of the U.S. economy remains under the control of the independent Federal Reserve.

Can I spend the 24-karat Trump coin at a store? Technically, the coin has a legal face value of $1. However, because it is minted from 24-karat gold, its intrinsic metal value and numismatic collector value far exceed its $1 face value. It is meant to be collected and held as an asset or piece of memorabilia, not used in daily commercial transactions.

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Acquisitions

The Saigol Pivot: Inside Maple Leaf Cement’s Strategic Incursion into Pakistan’s Banking Sector

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It is a move that initially appears as a study in industrial asymmetry: a northern cement giant, whose fortunes are tied to construction gypsum and clinker, systematically acquiring a stake in one of the country’s mid-tier Islamic banks. But beneath the surface of the Competition Commission of Pakistan’s (CCP) recent authorization lies a narrative far more sophisticated than a simple portfolio shuffle. This is the Saigol family’s Kohinoor Maple Leaf Group (KMLG) executing a deliberate financial pivot, threading the needle between regulatory scrutiny and the volatile realities of the 2026 Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) .

The CCP’s green light for Maple Leaf Cement Factory Limited (MLCF) to acquire shares in Faysal Bank Limited (FABL)—including a rare ex post facto approval for purchases made during 2025—offers a window into the evolving strategy of Pakistan’s old industrial guard .

The “Grey Area”: A Regulatory Slap on the Wrist?

In the sterile language of antitrust law, the transaction raised no red flags. The CCP’s Phase I assessment correctly noted the “entirely distinct” nature of cement manufacturing and commercial banking, concluding there was no horizontal or vertical overlap that could stifle competition .

However, the procedural backstory is where the texture lies. The Commission acknowledged reviewing a batch of open-market transactions on the PSX that were “already completed prior to obtaining the Commission’s approval” .

While the CCP granted ex-post facto authorization under Section 31(1)(d)(i) of the Competition Act 2010, it simultaneously issued a pointed directive: MLCF must ensure strict compliance with pre-merger approval requirements for any future transactions . It is a reminder that in Pakistan’s current financial climate, where liquidity is king and speed is of the essence, even blue-chip conglomerates can find themselves navigating the grey areas between investment opportunity and regulatory process. The directive serves as a subtle but firm warning to the market that the CCP is watching the methods of stake-building as closely as the ultimate concentration of ownership .

Strategic Rationale: Beyond Horizontal Logic

To understand the “why,” one must look beyond the cement kilns of Daudkhel and toward the balance sheets of the group. The Kohinoor Maple Leaf Group, born from the trifurcation of the Saigol empire, has long been a bastion of textiles and cement . But 2026 presents a different economic calculus.

Conglomerate diversification is the name of the game. With the PSX experiencing the volatile convulsions of a pre-election year—oscillating between geopolitical panic and IMF-induced stability—banking stocks have emerged as a high-yield, defensive hedge . Unlike the cyclical nature of cement, which is hostage to construction schedules and government infrastructure spending, the banking sector offers exposure to interest rate spreads and consumer financing.

For MLCF, a stake in Faysal Bank is not about vertical integration; it is about earnings stability. Faysal Bank, with its significant presence in Islamic finance (a sector rapidly gaining traction in Pakistan), offers a counter-cyclical buffer to the group’s industrial holdings. As one analyst put it, “They are swapping kiln dust for deposit multiplier.”

The Real-Time Context: PSX Volatility and the Hunt for Yield (March 2026)

The timing of the final authorization is critical. March 2026 finds the Pakistani equity market in a state of calculated anxiety. The KSE-100 has recently weathered a 16.9% correction from its January peaks, triggered by Middle East tensions and fears over the Strait of Hormuz . While energy stocks swing wildly with every oil price fluctuation, banking giants like Faysal Bank offer a rare port in the storm.

According to Arif Habib Limited’s latest strategy notes, the banking sector is currently trading at a price-to-book discount, with institutions like National Bank of Pakistan offering dividend yields as high as 13.3% . While Faysal Bank’s yields are more modest than NBP’s, its shareholding structure—dominated by Bahrain’s Ithmaar Holding (66.78%)—makes it an attractive target for local industrial groups seeking influence without the burden of outright control .

By accumulating shares incrementally through the PSX, KMLG is effectively renting exposure to the financialization of the Pakistani economy. It is a low-profile, high-liquidity entry into a sector that the State Bank of Pakistan projects will remain resilient despite import pressures and currency fluctuations .

Faysal Bank Limited

Faysal Bank: The Prize Within

Why Faysal Bank specifically? The lender has carved a niche in the Islamic banking corridor, an area the government is keen to expand. With total institutional investors holding over 72% of the bank’s shares, it represents a tightly held, professionally managed asset .

Maple Leaf’s creeping acquisition suggests a desire to secure a seat at the table of Pakistan’s financial future. While the CCP authorization allows for an increased shareholding, it stops short of a full-blown merger. For now, this remains an “incursion”—a strategic toehold in the world of high finance, managed by the same family stewardship that Tariq Saigol has applied to transforming KMLG’s manufacturing base through sustainability and innovation .

The Verdict

The Maple Leaf Cement–Faysal Bank transaction is a harbinger of things to come in the 2026 Pakistani market. As the lines between industrial capital and financial capital blur, we will likely see more of these “conglomerate” acquisitions.

The CCP’s involvement, complete with its ex-post facto review and compliance directive, has set a precedent. It tells the market that while the commission is willing to facilitate investments that support “capital formation,” it will not tolerate a laissez-faire approach to merger control .

For the Saigol family, this is not just an investment; it is a hedge against the future. In an economy where cement demand can cool overnight but banking remains the lifeblood of commerce, owning a piece of the pipeline is the ultimate strategic pivot.

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Analysis

Saba Capital’s Bold Tender Offer: Buying Blue Owl Funds at Steep Discounts Amid Private Credit Turmoil

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When a hedge fund swoops in to buy distressed stakes at 20–35% below net asset value, it’s rarely a random act of generosity. It’s arbitrage—and it signals something deeper is fracturing in the private credit market.

In early February 2026, Boaz Weinstein’s Saba Capital Management, partnering with Cox Capital Partners, launched a tender offer to acquire shares in three Blue Owl Capital funds: Blue Owl Capital Corporation II (OBDC II), Blue Owl Technology Income Corp (OTIC), and Blue Owl Credit Income Corp (OCIC). The proposed prices ranged from 65 to 80 cents on the dollar relative to each fund’s stated net asset value—a brazen bet that retail investors, trapped by redemption gates and growing skepticism about private asset valuations, would take whatever exit they could get.

This is hedge fund opportunism in credit funds at its most calculated. And it may be one of the more revealing moments in a private credit story that has been quietly unraveling for months.

The Saba Blue Owl Tender Offer: What We Know

The mechanics of the Saba Capital–Blue Owl BDC discount trade are straightforward, even if the implications are anything but. Saba and Cox are offering retail and institutional investors in these non-traded business development companies (BDCs) a cash buyout of their stakes—at prices well below what Blue Owl’s own accounting says those assets are worth.

For OBDC II, OTIC, and OCIC, the discounts reportedly sit between 20% and 35% below NAV, depending on the vehicle. Saba’s thesis: the stated NAVs are optimistic—possibly significantly so—and liquidity pressure on investors will drive enough sellers to make the trade profitable even if some markdown in underlying valuations is warranted.

Blue Owl, for its part, has not been passive. The firm has moved to sell approximately $1.4 billion in assets and announced plans to return capital to investors. But it has also halted redemptions across certain funds, a move that, while legally permissible under fund structures, tends to send a loud signal to the market: liquidity is tighter than the pitch deck implied. Reuters reported a notable drop in OWL shares following news of the asset sales and debt fund restructurings, even as the broader stock recovered modestly on reports of Saba’s involvement—a curious market response that speaks volumes about investor sentiment.

Why Boaz Weinstein Is Betting Against Private Credit Valuations

Weinstein has built his reputation on identifying structural mispricing in complex credit instruments. He rose to prominence partly by recognizing—and profiting from—risks in synthetic credit markets that others had underwritten with excessive confidence. His move into the Blue Owl funds at steep discount follows a familiar playbook: find an illiquid market where reported values and transactable values have diverged sharply, then extract the spread.

The non-traded BDC redemption halt is the mechanism that creates his opportunity. When investors cannot sell their stakes on an exchange and the fund manager suspends the redemption window, those investors are effectively stranded. A tender offer—even at a painful discount—can look attractive to someone who needs liquidity or simply no longer trusts the NAV figure printed on their quarterly statement.

Saba’s position is essentially a structured bet that:

  • Private credit valuations are inflated relative to what a secondary buyer would actually pay
  • Redemption pressure will continue, keeping retail sellers motivated
  • Blue Owl’s asset sales will either validate the markdown or, at minimum, prevent meaningful NAV appreciation

This is not merely opportunism for its own sake. It’s a price discovery mechanism in a corner of the market that has long lacked one.

The Broader Private Credit Liquidity Crisis

To understand why the Saba Capital–Blue Owl BDC discount trade matters beyond a single firm’s P&L, you need to zoom out to the $1.8 trillion private credit market.

Over the past five years, private credit exploded as institutional and retail capital flooded into non-bank lending. The pitch was compelling: higher yields, lower volatility (a feature, skeptics noted, of infrequent mark-to-market pricing rather than genuine stability), and access to growing companies bypassed by traditional banks. BDCs, including non-traded vehicles like those in Blue Owl’s lineup, became popular conduits for retail investors seeking yield in a low-rate world.

But several structural tensions have been building:

  1. Rising redemption requests as investors reassess the risk-return profile in a higher-rate environment where liquid credit alternatives have become more attractive.
  2. AI-driven disruption in software lending, which has raised questions about the credit quality of technology-focused portfolios—directly relevant to OTIC, Blue Owl’s tech-oriented income vehicle.
  3. NAV skepticism, as secondary market transactions and tender offers like Saba’s imply that the private assets underpinning these funds may be worth materially less than reported.
  4. Liquidity mismatches, baked into the non-traded structure itself—where quarterly redemption windows create an illusion of liquidity that evaporates precisely when investors want it most.

Bloomberg and the Financial Times have both noted that the impact of the Saba tender offer on the private credit market extends beyond Blue Owl, raising uncomfortable questions about how other non-traded BDCs and credit interval funds are being priced.

Blue Owl’s Response: Asset Sales and Capital Returns

Blue Owl’s decision to sell $1.4 billion in assets and accelerate capital returns is, on one reading, a responsible response to liquidity pressure. On another, it’s an implicit acknowledgment that the redemption halt was unsustainable and that some degree of NAV reset was necessary to restore credibility with investors.

The firm has been vocal in pushing back against what it characterizes as opportunistic and potentially misleading tender offers—a reasonable complaint given that Saba’s bid prices are not peer-reviewed appraisals of the underlying loan portfolios but rather negotiating anchors designed to attract distressed sellers. Blue Owl’s leadership has urged investors not to tender, pointing to ongoing asset management and anticipated distributions as the better path to value recovery.

Whether that argument lands will depend heavily on what the $1.4 billion in asset sales actually reveal about realized values. If dispositions close near stated NAV, Blue Owl’s credibility is substantially restored. If they close at significant markdowns, Saba’s thesis gains traction—and the ripple effects across the broader private credit fund universe could be considerable.

What This Means for Retail Investors

The retail investor risks in non-traded BDCs have been well-documented in regulatory filings, though often buried in dense prospectus language. Investors drawn in by above-market yield projections and the prestige of institutional-quality private credit exposure are now encountering the structural fine print: redemption queues, quarterly windows, and the absence of a liquid secondary market.

Saba’s tender offer creates a perverse but real choice. Accepting means crystallizing a 20–35% loss relative to stated NAV. Rejecting means trusting that Blue Owl’s reported values are accurate, that the asset sales will close cleanly, and that redemption capacity will normalize—none of which are guaranteed.

For financial advisors who placed clients into these structures, this is a moment of reckoning. The hedge fund opportunism in credit funds story is partly about Weinstein’s acuity. But it’s also about the mismatch between how non-traded private credit products were sold to retail investors and how they are actually performing under stress.

Forward-Looking: A Stress Test for Private Credit’s Retail Ambitions

The Saba Capital buys Blue Owl stakes at discount episode will likely serve as a case study for regulators, fund managers, and financial advisors for years. It arrives at a moment when the SEC has been scrutinizing the marketing of illiquid alternatives to retail investors, and when several major asset managers are pushing to expand access to private markets through evergreen fund structures.

If the tender offer attracts significant seller participation, it will validate the secondary discount as a real price—not a theoretical one—and pressure other non-traded BDC managers to either shore up liquidity mechanisms or face similar activist attention. If Blue Owl successfully defends its NAV through disciplined asset management and transparent dispositions, it may emerge as a model for how to navigate activist pressure in the private credit space.

Either way, the Blue Owl funds steep discount offer of 2026 has already accomplished something that quarterly NAV statements and manager commentary rarely do: it has forced a genuine conversation about what these assets are actually worth in a market that would prefer not to ask.

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