Renowned analyst: The credit cycle has reversed—cash is king, and gold can reach $10,000!

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Ed Dowd believes that private credit funds collectively set redemption thresholds, sending a signal that the credit cycle turning point is here. The knock-on effects will spread to the broader economy. Meanwhile, the Middle East conflict will accelerate a global recession that is “inevitable no matter what.” Dowd maintains his long-term bullish view on gold, expecting the gold price to reach $10k per ounce around 2030, and he is equally optimistic about silver’s long-term outlook.

Global credit markets are showing alarming cracks. Wall Street asset manager and Phinance Technologies analyst Ed Dowd warns that pressure in the private credit sector is accelerating as it spreads. Several top-tier institutions have successively imposed redemption limits on investors, and the credit cycle turning point may already have arrived.

Dowd said that Blue Owl, Apollo, BlackRock, and KKR have all taken “gating” measures in their related funds to prevent investors from redeeming. He pointed out that high-net-worth individuals, insurance companies, and pension funds have put tens of millions of dollars into these private credit funds, but now they face the predicament of being unable to exit. Dowd characterizes this as the starting point of a “credit cycle reversal,” and warns that the knock-on effects will spread to the overall economy.

Against this backdrop, Dowd maintains his long-term bullish view on gold, expecting the gold price to reach $10k per ounce around 2030, and he is equally optimistic about silver’s long-term outlook. In his 2026 economic outlook report, he clearly advises investors to hold cash, believing that risk assets will continue to face pressure.

The “gating” wave in private credit: a signal of the credit cycle turning point

Dowd issued an early warning as far back as January this year, saying that a “credit destruction cycle” has already emerged in the private credit sector. His main concern at the time was that, over the past two years, almost all loan growth in the economy came from banks injecting capital into private credit institutions. This kind of structural concentration risk is extremely high.

Now, he believes the situation has clearly worsened. “The number of credit funds setting redemption gates continues to increase,” Dowd said. “This is a very important signal, because the investors in these funds—high-net-worth individuals, insurance companies, pension funds—now want to redeem, only to find that the door has been shut.”

He describes private credit as “a canary in the mine,” emphasizing that problems in this space appeared long before geopolitical conflicts escalated. They are not the product of external shocks, but an early signal of an endogenous credit cycle reversal.

Geopolitical conflict overlaps: accelerating rather than changing the recession path

Dowd believes that any escalation in Iran will only accelerate the negative economic scenario he has predicted, rather than fundamentally changing its direction. “The Iran war is just adding fuel to an already negative global backdrop,” he said.

He noted that if the situation can be resolved quickly and the Strait of Hormuz reopens, the market may see a brief rebound. But that won’t change the downward trend in economic fundamentals. “There will be a temporary relief rally, but everything I’ve predicted will still roll forward through the system.”

If the conflict remains unresolved for a long time, Dowd warns that global demand will suffer substantial damage, thereby accelerating the global recession that he believes is “inevitable no matter what.”

Inflation up in the short term, but demand destruction will suppress long-term prices

On his inflation path view, Dowd holds a relatively counterintuitive position: although he characterizes the current situation as an “oil price shock,” he does not think it will turn into a sustained inflation shock.

“Demand destruction will ultimately arrive,” he explained. “Inflation will rise in the short term, but then it will fall again as everything else’s prices retreat—especially the housing component in the CPI.”

He pointed out that rents have already been moving downward, and home prices historically follow rent trends. “Now renting is cheaper than buying, and home prices will fall. That alone is enough to trigger a recession.” He added further that if an AI bubble bursts and combines with the factors above, the severity of the global recession will deepen even more.

Cash is king, long-term gold target $10k

In the face of the multiple risks above, Dowd takes a clearly conservative stance on asset allocation in his 2026 economic outlook report.

“I’m currently in a very conservative mode,” he said. “Our view is that risk assets will continue to face pressure—cash is king.”

In precious metals, Dowd maintains a strongly bullish long-term stance on gold, expecting the gold price to reach $10k per ounce around 2030, and he is similarly optimistic about silver’s long-term performance. He also suggests that investors stock up on food and drinking water to deal with potential supply-chain disruption risks.

Risk warning and disclaimer clauses

There are risks in the market; investment should be done cautiously. This article does not constitute personal investment advice, nor does it consider specific users’ particular investment objectives, financial conditions, or needs. Users should consider whether any opinions, viewpoints, or conclusions in this article align with their specific circumstances. Investing based on this is at your own risk.  




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