Updated
Updated · Reuters · May 13
UK Council Pensions Put £32 Billion Into Shadow Lending as Nearly Half Top 10% Exposure
Updated
Updated · Reuters · May 13

UK Council Pensions Put £32 Billion Into Shadow Lending as Nearly Half Top 10% Exposure

3 articles · Updated · Reuters · May 13
  • More than £32 billion of England and Wales local government pension assets is now tied to private and multi-asset credit, with Reuters finding nearly half of 86 schemes had allocated at least 10% to those funds.
  • Average exposure reached 4.2% in private credit and 8.7% in multi-asset credit, far above official estimates showing defined-contribution workplace pensions put 3.5% into all illiquid assets in 2025.
  • Lambeth had almost 26% of assets in the two categories by December 2025, while Cumbria allocated 8% to private debt, underscoring how some council schemes exceed levels seen in many private funds.
  • Regulators and academics warned opaque valuations, hidden leverage and capital calls in downturns could create liquidity stress, forcing schemes to sell liquid assets or borrow if private markets sour further.
  • Consultant Hymans Robertson said there were no immediate cashflow concerns because councils can rebalance across other assets, but the Bank of England is already stress-testing private credit after wider market strains.
As regulators warn of 'shadow lending' risks, are UK public pensions unknowingly facing a major crisis?
In the opaque private credit market, what is the true value of Britain’s pension fund assets?