The collapse of Market Financial Solutions continues to reverberate across the broader financial services sector, echoing the implosion of U.S. auto parts supplier First Brands last year. It comes amid deepening fears that stress in niche credit markets could spill over to the broader banking system.
The U.K. specialist mortgage lender’s downfall has hit major banks and investment management firms with potentially hundreds of millions of dollars in potential losses.
British lenders Barclays and HSBC revealed the extent of their losses this past earnings season, while U.S. banks and investment management firms, including Jefferies, Wells Fargo, Apollo and Elliott Management, are also caught up in MFS’ labyrinthine lending arrangements.
But how did the failure of a London-based non-bank lender — whose customers were typically higher-risk borrowers in need of quick financing typically unavailable within traditional channels — suddenly engulf a slew of financial services giants on both sides of the Atlantic?
Greater scrutiny
MFS was a specialist mortgage lender that provided bridge financing, a type of short-term loan to often asset-rich but cash-poor customers, with its total loan book reckoned to be worth more than £2.4 billion.
The firm, led by Paresh Raja, was seen as a key player in the U.K. bridge lending market, which was sized at about £13.4 billion ($17.8 billion) at the end of 2025, according to the Bridging & Development Lenders Association, the U.K. industry trade group.
Barclays.
MFS entered into an insolvency process on Feb. 25 amid allegations of fraud.
These include accusations of “double pledging” — where the same real estate assets were pledged as underlying collateral against multiple loans — as well as a reported £1.3 billion shortfall between the value of the collateral and what it owed to creditors.
Its complicated funding structures are now being pored over in the bankruptcy courts, with roughly a dozen financial services firms in the U.S. and Europe exposed to the debacle. It has led to greater regulatory scrutiny of banks’ interconnectedness with specialist lenders and private credit funds.
Raja, who is based in Dubai, has denied any wrongdoing.
Barclays revealed in its first-quarter earnings update last month that it had suffered a £228 million ($308 million) hit from the MFS implosion, while Santander is understood to have a $267 million exposure. HSBC reported a $400 million impairment from the MFS debacle in its first-quarter earnings results, with its exposure stemming from a credit arrangement with Apollo-backed Atlas SP.
Meanwhile, insolvency documents cited by the Financial Times underline the extent of the exposures more broadly.
Elliott Management’s exposure is £200 million, while Jefferies has a total exposure of about £103 million, which already includes a $20 million loss. Wells Fargo’s exposure amounts to £143 million. Avenue Capital and Castlelake have exposures to the tune of £98 million and £70 million, respectively.
Depending on how much money is recovered, eventual losses may come in lower than total exposure.
A referendum on private credit?
Industry pros said the debacle shows how lenders in the space, such as investment banks and asset managers, now face a fundamental challenge in assessing and verifying their true economic exposure to risks within such complex credit structures.
Sumit Gupta, CEO of Oxane Partners, said the MFS blow-up highlights the risks around double-pledging, potential fraud and counterparty risk stemming from the “layers of financings” across bank facilities, securitizations, and other sources of private capital within specialty lending.
Apollo Global Management.
“The MFS situation should be viewed less as a referendum on private credit and more as an indicator that complex funding chains need equally robust operating controls,” Gupta told CNBC via email. “It exposes how hard it can be to see risk clearly when data is fragmented across managers, servicers, trustees, bank accounts and financing vehicles.”
But he said that the industry is already responding with greater scrutiny of loan data, collateral reporting and governance processes as a result of the collapse.
Nick Tsafos, partner-in-charge at EisnerAmper in New York, said lenders need to independently assess collateral, claims and risks across the full life of a loan, rather than relying solely on borrower representations.
“Maintaining control wherever possible is crucial,” Tsafos told CNBC via email. “It’s also important to recognize that failures often occur after loans are funded.”
The BDLA said it does not comment on individual firms or specific funding arrangements.
Adam Tyler, the BDLA’s chief executive officer, said that maintaining high standards across the market is a “central priority” for the trade body.
“Members are required to adhere to our Code of Conduct, which is regularly monitored to ensure that it is followed to encourage transparency, responsible lending, clear communication and fair treatment of customers,” Tyler told CNBC via email. “The BDLA also supports standards through member engagement, professional development and ongoing dialogue with policymakers and regulators.”

