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[The Evolution of Financial Systems: From Regulatory Guardrails to the Factory Model of Investing]-[Alan Waxman - Private Credit and the Modern Financial System - [Invest Like the Best, EP.466]]

Invest Like the Best with Patrick O'Shaughnessy · B2 · 2026-04-08

Business
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📋 Summary

The Historical Evolution of Financial Systems

Alan Waxman, CEO of Sixth Street, outlines three distinct systems that have shaped the American financial landscape. He emphasizes that understanding these systems—defined by their incentive systems, guardrails, and market structures—is essential for diagnosing current market dynamics.

  • System 1 (1933–1999): Triggered by the 1929 crash and the failure of 9,000 banks, the Glass-Steagall Act established a clear separation between commercial banks (deposit-taking) and investment banks (principal risk-taking). This era, while stable due to strong guardrails, was arguably not optimized for maximum economic growth in a globalized world, leading to its eventual repeal.
  • System 2 (2000–2008): Following deregulation, commercial and investment banks merged, leading to a massive increase in leverage. Waxman identifies the core failure here as a combination of liquidity mismatches and leverage, which served as the "cocktail for every historical financial crisis," culminating in the Global Financial Crisis (GFC).
  • System 3 (Post-GFC to Present): Post-GFC reforms like Basel III constrained commercial banks, creating a vacuum that the private capital industry filled. Waxman argues this system was initially healthy because private capital maintained matched assets and liabilities—unlike banks, they had no depositors demanding immediate liquidity.

The Rise of the 'Factory Model' of Investing

Waxman warns that since 2018, behavioral changes have introduced systemic risks, which he terms the "factory model" of investing. This model is defined by the industrialization of the liability side (fundraising) followed by the industrialization of the asset side (investing).

  • Liability Industrialization: Firms prioritize raising as much capital as possible, as fast as possible, often by creating narrow, simple vehicles. This behavior often ignores the necessity of perfectly matching assets and liabilities.
  • Asset Industrialization: To deploy the massive influx of capital, firms lower their underwriting standards. Waxman notes that this "inflow investing" is a dangerous departure from the "old school artisanal investment model" that focuses on outstanding, risk-adjusted returns.
  • Symptoms of the Current Moment: The current noise surrounding private credit and perpetual private BDCs stems from these structural mismatches. When retail investors in the "wealth channel" demand liquidity, the illiquid nature of the underlying assets makes these vehicles vulnerable to redemption pressures.

Principles for Responsible Investing

Waxman advocates for a recalibration of the industry, emphasizing that the best guardrails are market mechanisms rather than just government regulation. To build a firm that survives and thrives, he suggests:

  1. Clarity of Purpose: Firms must decide if their goal is to manage the size of their balance sheet (factory model) or to serve customers through excellent investment returns.
  2. Asset-Liability Matching: Maintaining a rigid discipline where the liquidity of assets matches the terms provided to investors is a fundamental requirement for stability.
  3. Return per Unit of Risk: Investment decisions should be divorced from the pressure to deploy capital. Waxman highlights that at Sixth Street, they maintain a "wide aperture" and are willing to say "no" to capital if the investment environment does not support high-quality deployment.

Facing the Tiger: Adaptability in a Dynamic Era

Looking forward, Waxman views the current period of "creative destruction"—driven by AI and rapid technological shifts—as an opportunity for those who are highly adaptable. He emphasizes the importance of personal organization systems, such as his one-sheet "brain" method, to ensure dynamic prioritization of time. Ultimately, he concludes that the "Face the Tiger" ethos—confronting problems head-on rather than running from them—is the key to excellence in an environment where the pace of change is accelerating.

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📝Key Phrases

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📖 Transcript

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