### The Next Financial Crash: Why “Uninvestable” Assets Are the Real Threat

### The Next Financial Crash: Why “Uninvestable” Assets Are the Real Threat

The global financial system is a complex web of interdependencies. When a major shock occurs—like a pandemic or a sudden spike in interest rates—the initial damage is often visible.

Richard J Murphy · · 4 min read ·

The global financial system is a complex web of interdependencies. When a major shock occurs—like a pandemic or a sudden spike in interest rates—the initial damage is often visible. However, the most dangerous consequences are the hidden, secondary failures that follow. The next major crash is unlikely to come from a single, well-known sector. Instead, it will likely erupt from a cascade of failures triggered by a liquidity crisis in assets that most investors currently consider safe.

The core of the argument rests on a fundamental misunderstanding of risk. Many investors confuse “low volatility” with “safety.” In reality, the safest assets are those that can be easily sold for cash at any time, without a significant loss of value. This is known as liquidity. An asset may have a stable price, but if no one is buying when you need to sell, its price is an illusion. The true danger lies in assets that appear stable but become “uninvestable”—meaning they cannot be sold at any reasonable price during a market panic.

This phenomenon is often referred to as a “liquidity black hole.” When a large number of investors try to exit the same asset simultaneously, the market for that asset simply dries up. The price does not just fall; it collapses because there are no buyers. This is different from a normal bear market, where assets trade at lower prices. In a liquidity black hole, the trade itself becomes impossible.

The current environment is ripe for such an event. For years, central banks injected massive amounts of liquidity into the system, pushing interest rates to near zero. This forced investors to chase yield, moving money into riskier and less liquid assets to get a return. Now, with interest rates rising rapidly, the cost of holding these assets has increased. The “carry trade”—borrowing cheap money to invest in higher-yielding, illiquid assets—is unwinding.

The most likely trigger for the next crash is a failure in a corner of the market that is heavily leveraged and deeply interconnected. Consider the private credit market. This market, which includes direct lending to companies by non-bank lenders, has grown explosively. These loans are not traded on public exchanges, making them extremely illiquid. If a major private credit fund faces a wave of redemption requests, it cannot simply sell assets to raise cash. It would have to mark down its portfolio severely, potentially triggering a crisis of confidence that spreads to the entire banking system.

Another critical area is the commercial real estate (CRE) market. Office buildings, in particular, have seen a dramatic drop in value due to remote work. Many of these properties are financed with debt that is coming due. Banks, already cautious, are reluctant to refinance. If a major property owner defaults, it could force a fire sale of assets, dragging down the value of all similar properties. This, in turn, would hit the balance sheets of regional banks, which hold a large portion of this debt.

The mechanism of contagion is clear. A liquidity event in one market forces leveraged investors (like hedge funds or private equity firms) to sell other, more liquid assets to raise cash. This selling pressure then spreads to stocks, bonds, and even gold, creating a feedback loop. The initial problem—say, a default in private credit—becomes a systemic crisis as liquidity evaporates across the board.

History provides a clear warning. The 2008 financial crisis was not caused by subprime mortgages themselves, but by the opaque, illiquid derivatives built on top of them. The next crisis will follow the same pattern, but with a different set of “uninvestable” assets. The lesson is not to predict the exact trigger, but to understand the underlying vulnerability: a system that has grown dependent on liquidity it can no longer count on.

For the average investor, the takeaway is caution. The safest position is not in assets that look stable, but in assets that are truly liquid. Cash, short-term government bonds, and highly traded index funds offer a degree of safety that illiquid alternatives cannot match. As the saying goes, “Liquidity is a mirage until you need it.” When the next crash arrives, the difference between a paper loss and a real one will be the ability to sell.

Related Coverage

Global Economic Order Buckles Under War, Debt, and a Tech-Led Market Meltdown

The global economy is navigating a perfect storm of cascading crises, as war-driven hunger, volatile financial markets, and the escalating human and environmental costs of unchecked growth expose the deep fault lines in a system that prioritizes profit over people. From a brutal sell-off in Asian stock markets sparked by cooling AI demand, to a record 363 million people facing acute starvation, the past week has laid bare a world where financial accumulation and geopolitical conflict are generating unsustainable inequality and precarious conditions for billions.

War, Trillion-Dollar IPOs, and a Planet in Flames: The Global Economy’s Broken Bargain

A cascade of overlapping emergencies—from collapsing ceasefires and record-breaking hunger to a potentially historic climate disaster and a frenzy of trillion-dollar tech stock market debuts—is reshaping the world. The common thread across these disasters is a global system increasingly corrupted by financial influence and corporate lobbying, prioritizing profit and military spending over fundamental human needs and rights, leaving ordinary people to bear the costs of conflict, displacement, and environmental collapse.

A World Held Hostage: How War, Profit, and a Broken System Fuel Endless Crisis

A cascade of overlapping emergencies—from collapsing peace deals and record-breaking hunger to a potentially historic climate disaster and a frenzy of trillion-dollar tech stock market debuts—is reshaping the world, driven by a global system that increasingly prioritizes military spending and corporate profit over fundamental human needs and rights.

A Fragile Peace Shatters: How a Global System Built for Profit Fuels Endless War, Climate Chaos, and a Crushing Debt Crisis

A brief moment of hope for global stability, sparked by a tentative peace deal between the United States and Iran that promised to unlock vital oil routes, has collapsed under renewed violence, a record-breaking climate disaster, and a political upheaval that is shifting nations to the far right. At the core of this interconnected crisis lies a global economic order that prioritizes military spending and corporate profit over human welfare, funneling public resources into endless conflict while ordinary citizens bear the costs in hunger, displacement, and deepening inequality.

War, Profit, and a Planet in Flames: How a Captured Global System Fuels Endless Crisis

A cascade of overlapping emergencies—from collapsing ceasefires and record-breaking hunger to a potentially historic climate disaster and a frenzy of trillion-dollar tech stock market debuts—is reshaping the world. The common thread across these disasters is a global system increasingly corrupted by financial influence and corporate lobbying, prioritizing profit and military spending over fundamental human needs and rights, leaving ordinary people to bear the costs of conflict, displacement, and environmental collapse.

War, Profit, and a Planet in Flames: How a Captured Global System Fuels Endless Crisis

A cascade of overlapping emergencies—from collapsing ceasefires and record-breaking hunger to a potentially historic climate disaster and a frenzy of trillion-dollar tech stock market debuts—is reshaping the world. The common thread across these disasters is a global system increasingly corrupted by financial influence and corporate lobbying, prioritizing profit and military spending over fundamental human needs and rights, leaving ordinary people to bear the costs of conflict, displacement, and environmental collapse.

Related Editorials

▶ Watch the original video on YouTube