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The Big Picture by PS editors

After the 2008 global financial crisis, regulators took action to limit the buildup of risk in the banking system. But that risk appears to have migrated elsewhere: as new regulations, from Basel III to the Volcker Rule, raised the costs for banks of extending leveraged loans, non-bank lenders rushed to take over some of banking’s riskier activities. As a result, the private-credit market surged from $158 billion in 2010 to as much as $3.5 trillion today.

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