The next financial crisis won't look like 2008. The IMF just told us what it will look like instead.
Markets keep treating AI as a story about chips and model releases. The IMF is warning it is now also a story about who owes whom, and how the bill lands when the music stops.

Two things landed on the same day in late June 2026, and only one of them got the column inches it deserved.
The loud one is the prediction market calling a 61 percent probability that GPT-5.6 will drop inside the next ten days. That story writes itself: another model, another leap, another breathless screenshot. The quieter one is a sentence buried in an IMF financial-stability bulletin, dropped on 30 June at 14:37 UTC: artificial-intelligence-related borrowing, the Fund warns, now poses a greater financial-stability risk than the elevated valuations in technology stocks themselves.
Read those two items together and the picture clarifies. The next crisis will not arrive on the front page. It will arrive in a credit committee's loan book, on a data centre developer's balance sheet, in a private-credit fund's quarterly mark, and then — when enough of those marks move at once — on a sovereign's balance sheet.
What the IMF is actually saying
The IMF's frame is worth pausing on, because it inverts the usual hierarchy. For the last two years the conversation about AI and the financial system has been about equity prices: the Magnificent Seven, the concentration in the S&P 500, the gap between capital expenditure and cash flow. The Fund's warning, as captured in the unusual_whales wire on 30 June, is that the more dangerous line runs through the credit system, not the equity market. AI-related borrowing — the term loans, the project finance for data centres, the private credit extended to GPU lessors, the working capital lines behind model-training contracts — now carries a systemic risk premium that the equity-market conversation has not yet priced.
That is a sharp claim. It implies that the markets treating AI as a story about chips and model releases are mis-pricing the location of the risk. The equity side is visible, liquid, and marked daily. The credit side is opaque, longer-dated, and sits in vehicles that report quarterly at best. The Fund is asking regulators to look where the equity desks are not looking.
The model-release mania is the cover, not the story
The Polymarket headline is the cover. A 61 percent implied probability that the next flagship model lands in the next ten days, on a market referenced at poly.market/v61G469, is treated as a referendum on the frontier-lab race. It is also, structurally, a referendum on capital intensity. Each new model class has been more expensive to train than the last, and the gap between training cost and inference revenue is being bridged, in significant part, by debt and structured finance rather than by operating cash flow. The release cycle is funded. The funding is the story.
This is the part that does not fit the press release. The labs are not charities, and the hyperscalers are not banks. But the financial plumbing underwriting the build-out — the data-centre REITs, the GPU-financing vehicles, the private-credit funds that have stepped in where traditional lenders will not underwrite a 100,000-chip cluster — has begun to look like a parallel banking system with a frontier-tech paint job. The IMF's flagging of AI-related borrowing as a greater risk than tech equity valuations is a polite way of saying that paint is not capital.
What the counter-narrative gets right
The honest counter-reading is that this is a build-out, and build-outs always look alarming mid-cycle. Railways, fibre, container shipping, even the early cloud-data-centre wave all carried similar warnings about stranded assets and over-capacity. In that telling, the IMF is doing what institutions do: running scenarios, mapping tail risks, asking for disclosure. The build will mature, the loans will be repaid, and the equity market's pricing of AI capex will turn out to have been roughly right.
There is something to that. Demand for inference is, by every public data point, still outrunning supply. The hyperscalers' order books extend years into the future. The risk the counter-narrative underweights is concentration — not of models, but of creditors. When a small number of private-credit funds and a handful of bank balance sheets sit across most of the GPU-leasing and data-centre project finance, a single repricing event is not a single-asset problem. It is a sector problem. That is the language central banks use when they mean business.
What the next downturn could actually look like
If the IMF is right, the failure mode is not a Mag Seven correction. It is a credit event in a vehicle most equity investors cannot name. A private-credit fund marks down a GPU-leasing portfolio. A regional bank that lent into a data-centre build takes a provision. A sovereign wealth fund marks its co-investment. The marks trigger margin calls on the structured facilities that sit above them. The margin calls hit the funds that lent into those facilities. The cycle that begins in a credit committee's quarterly review ends, as it always does, at the central bank's window.
That is the structural pattern: opacity metastasises into illiquidity, illiquidity becomes contagion, and contagion becomes a supervisory problem. The 2008 crisis looked like a housing story until it was a money-market-fund story, and then a sovereign story. This one will look like a data-centre story until it is a private-credit story, and then a sovereign story. The IMF, by naming AI-related borrowing as the larger risk before the equity-market conversation has caught up, is trying to shorten the surprise.
Stakes
Who loses if the trajectory continues? Pension funds and insurers holding private-credit exposure with the wrong liquidity profile. Regional banks whose loan books have quietly lengthened into AI infrastructure. Sovereigns whose export earnings depend on a build-out that slows. The Gulf states financing US-dollar AI capex through their sovereign vehicles are exposed in both directions — they own the lenders and they own the off-takers.
Who wins? The funds that read the IMF bulletin first and reposition second. The regulators who use the warning as cover to extend disclosure rules into private credit before, not after, a crisis. And, in a colder framing, the labs and hyperscalers themselves: every IMF warning that does not result in a crisis is, in effect, a public subsidy of the implicit guarantee that their funding will hold.
The Polymarket line will resolve one way or the other inside ten days. The IMF's line will not resolve for years, and when it does, the resolution will be in basis points, not in headlines. That is the asymmetry worth pricing now.
This publication treats AI-related credit risk as a story about financial plumbing, not frontier capability — the same editorial line we took when early warnings about non-bank mortgage exposure appeared in 2006.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://x.com/unusual_whales/status/2039104822109204812