
Credit Exchange with Lisa Lee Arini president Mathew Cestar says Europe’s missing AI boom provides opportunities
Feb 13, 2026
Mathew Cestar, president of Arini Capital Management and former co‑head of investment banking, shares views on European credit and private markets. He explains why Europe’s miss on the AI equity boom makes credit appealing. He discusses rising AI capex driving credit supply, a broadening of M&A beyond mega deals, expected upticks in private credit defaults, and the positive role of regulatory scrutiny.
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Private Credit Defaults Will Drive Manager Dispersion
- Private credit defaults have been muted but are likely to rise in 2026 as economic sensitivity and inflation pressures feed through.
- Cestar predicts greater dispersion of returns across managers as weaker underwriting and covenant protections are tested.
Europe Missed The AI Boom Making Credit More Predictable
- Europe largely missed the AI-driven growth surge that is powering much of recent US GDP expansion.
- Mathew Cestar says that makes European credit more attractive because companies are higher quality, asset-rich, and less exposed to tech disruption.
Prepare For Higher Credit Supply From AI Capex And M&A
- Anticipate rising supply in credit markets from hyperscaler AI financing and increased M&A, which will change the supply/demand balance.
- Cestar warns investors to prepare for more issuance and to navigate heightened volatility to find risk‑adjusted returns.
