Contrary to theories that recent blow-ups like Tricolor indicate more fraud is coming, the real issue is broad economic stress. Using Warren Buffett's "tide goes out" analogy, higher rates and persistent inflation are exposing fundamental weaknesses and squeezing consumers across large, non-AI sectors of the economy.

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The 'bezel' is the inventory of hidden, fraudulent wealth that builds up during good economic times. Investor overconfidence, plentiful capital, and lax due diligence create the perfect environment for financial scams to flourish, with this phantom wealth only being discovered during a downturn.

Default rates are not uniform. High-yield bonds are low due to a 2020 "cleansing." Leveraged loans show elevated defaults due to higher rates. Private credit defaults are masked but may be as high as 6%, indicated by "bad PIK" amendments, suggesting hidden stress.

The most imprudent lending decisions occur during economic booms. Widespread optimism, complacency, and fear of missing out cause investors to lower their standards and overlook risks, sowing the seeds for future failures that are only revealed in a downturn.

The US economy is not broadly strong; its perceived strength is almost entirely driven by a massive, concentrated bet on AI. This singular focus props up markets and growth metrics, but it conceals widespread weakness in other sectors, creating a high-stakes, fragile economic situation.

Widespread credit is the common accelerant in major financial crashes, from 1929's margin loans to 2008's subprime mortgages. This same leverage that fuels rapid growth is also the "match that lights the fire" for catastrophic downturns, with today's AI ecosystem showing similar signs.

Unlike the 2008 crisis, which was concentrated in housing and banking, today's risk is an 'everything bubble.' A decade of cheap money has simultaneously inflated stocks, real estate, crypto, and even collectibles, meaning a collapse would be far broader and more contagious.

Recent credit failures and frauds are not 'systemic' risks that threaten the entire financial system's structure. Instead, they are 'systematic'—a regularly recurring behavioral phenomenon. Good times predictably lead to imprudent lending, creating clusters of defaults. The problem is human behavior, not a fundamental flaw in the market itself.

A viral chart linking ChatGPT's launch to falling job openings is misleading. Job openings began declining months earlier, largely due to Fed interest rate hikes. This highlights how complex macroeconomic trends are often oversimplified in popular narratives that rush to assign blame to new technology.

The dramatic rise in BNPL usage across all demographics, including 41% of young shoppers, is a negative forward-looking indicator. While framed as innovation, it's a form of modern usury that reveals consumers cannot afford their purchases, creating a significant, under-discussed credit risk for the economy.

For 40 years, falling rates pushed 'safe' bond funds into increasingly risky assets to chase yield. With rates now rising, these mis-categorized portfolios are the most vulnerable part of the financial system. A crisis in credit or sovereign debt is more probable than a stock-market-led crash.