Futures
Hundreds of contracts settled in USDT or BTC
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Futures Kickoff
Get prepared for your futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to experience risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
The "butterfly effect" of software crashes: BDC (Banking and Development Corporation) → Private Credit → Financial Sector? How a small glitch in the system can trigger a chain reaction leading to significant impacts across the financial industry, highlighting the interconnectedness and fragility of modern financial infrastructure.
Barclays Derivatives Strategy Team issued a report on February 5, 2026, warning that a sharp decline in the software industry is transmitting risks to the private credit market through Business Development Companies (BDCs).
According to Wind Trading Desk, the report points out that BDCs, as investment vehicles focused on small and medium-sized enterprises in the U.S., have a highly concentrated risk exposure to the software industry. The software sector has declined approximately 21% since the beginning of the year, leading to a significant deterioration in the quality of its underlying assets.
It is noteworthy that, the prices of financial sectors highly correlated with private credit returns have not yet fully reflected this potential risk. BDCs are mainly managed by large private equity firms and, although traded on public markets, their operating models are similar to private equity, focusing on current income and capital appreciation. The ongoing correction in the software industry could directly impact private credit products that rely on such assets, making this risk highly worthy of attention.
Software Collapse Dragging Down Credit, Financial Sector Reacts Slowly
Barclays’ report states that BDCs’ industry risk exposure is highly concentrated in the software sector, accounting for about 20%, making their asset quality highly susceptible to recent declines in software stock prices and related credit valuations.
Data shows that the software sector has fallen about 21% since the start of the year. Correlation analysis indicates a persistent and significant statistical link between financial ETFs, high-yield bond ETFs, the Russell 2000 index, and private credit returns.
It is also noteworthy that, despite the BDC index showing signs of weakness and historical data indicating a high correlation between financial ETFs and BDC performance, current financial ETF trends remain relatively resilient. This divergence suggests that the market has not fully priced in the potential risks, and there may be a lag in the adjustment of financial ETFs.
Commodities Extremely Expensive, Fixed Income Extremely Cheap
The report points out that current market volatility pricing shows significant structural divergence. Barclays’ volatility screening tools reveal that commodity assets are at historically extreme high levels, with implied volatilities of US oil, silver, and gold ETFs at the 99%-100% percentile of historical levels, reflecting strong market pricing of geopolitical risks and currency devaluation expectations.
Meanwhile, volatility in fixed income and financial sectors is at historically low levels, with investment-grade corporate bonds, high-yield bonds, and financial ETFs’ volatilities at only the 11%, 3%, and 10% percentiles respectively, indicating that related risks are not yet fully priced in. Although short-term volatilities across various assets have recently increased, the risk premium in commodities remains notably high, highlighting ongoing pricing disparities across asset classes.
Market Coexists with Extreme Pessimism and Optimism
Barclays’ market sentiment indicators show that current capital allocation is highly polarized. Pessimism is heavily concentrated in small/mid-cap and technology sectors—the Russell 2000, tech sector, and consumer staples sector have putative put option percentile ranks of 97%, 100%, and 94%, respectively. In stark contrast, assets like gold and natural gas are strongly bullish, with their call option percentile ranks at only 10% and 0% (lower percentile indicates stronger bullish sentiment).
From the perspective of options skewness, the downside protection costs for NASDAQ 100 and materials sectors are significantly elevated, reflecting that the market is paying a high premium for tail risks; whereas, options on crude oil and natural gas have relatively moderate skewness pricing, indicating that tail risks for these assets are not yet fully priced.
The Most Cost-Effective “Insurance”
Based on historical drawdown data, Barclays’ analysis indicates that there are currently high-value hedging tools for tail risks across different asset classes.
Research shows that, if hedging global equity market risks, short-dated put options on high-yield bonds, financial sectors, and developed market ETFs offer the best risk-reward profile; for downside risks in large tech stocks, puts on high-yield bonds, investment-grade corporate bonds, and developed market ETFs are most effective; for potential declines in commodities, puts on high-yield bonds, developed markets, and oil & gas exploration ETFs provide optimal protection.
Overall, put options on high-yield bonds and financial sectors demonstrate outstanding cross-asset hedging efficiency in the current environment, with cost and potential payout structures showing significant advantages, making them preferred tools for managing multiple market risks.
Long-Term Trends: Correlations Surge, Commodities Under Significant Pressure
The current commodities sector faces substantial pressure, with volatility and term structure Z-values significantly above long-term averages, indicating market stress far beyond normal levels. Meanwhile, the credit market remains active, with trading activity in related ETF options continuing to rise, and volatility risk premiums above historical averages.
Notably, cross-asset correlations are currently at the 73rd percentile, showing a marked increase in the linkage between different asset classes, which diminishes diversification benefits. In contrast, correlations among sectors within the U.S. stock market are at only the 2nd percentile, indicating that internal market segmentation remains highly pronounced.