Private credit pioneers see downside of redemption

LONDON, March 3 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Redemption has become a dirty word for private credit’s most sophisticated pioneers. Blackstone (BX.N), opens new tab on Monday said it had reached into its own pocket to help its $82 billion loan fund meet $3.7 billion of cash ​calls from investors. It’s a sign of how the practice of packaging hard-to-trade assets into more accessible investment vehicles has turned from ‌a driver of future growth to a drag on sentiment.

Blackstone’s BCRED is a non-traded business development company, part of a group of funds which have mushroomed to over $300 billion of assets by loading up on bilateral private credit loans. The sector appealed to wealthy individuals by offering them access to higher-yielding assets, paired with the ability to withdraw their money ​every quarter.

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BCRED’s latest announcement suggests those individuals are having second thoughts. Rival manager Blue Owl recently suspended withdrawals from a much smaller fund. Blackstone’s ​vehicle on Monday revealed, opens new tab that it had received redemptions equivalent to 7.9% of its shares for the first quarter, up ⁠from 4.5% in the final three months of 2025.

The fund honored those requests, but only because Blackstone employees and the asset manager together ponied up $400 million. ​This enabled the fund to stay within the rules set by its share tender process, which currently caps redemptions at 7%. Even though it drew in some $2 ​billion of new money in the period, net outflows were still roughly $1.7 billion, before counting Blackstone’s contributions.

The question for BCRED and its peers is what happens if investors keep pulling out at the same pace. Even though BCRED has delivered a near-10% annual return since its launch in 2021, further redemptions are all too plausible. Private lenders’ exposure to the ​software industry, which is under threat from artificial intelligence, is a major concern. UBS analysts estimate that private credit portfolios have up to a quarter ​of their assets in software loans.

On paper, BCRED still has some wiggle room. It had $8 billion, opens new tab of liquidity at the end of 2025, suggesting it could absorb another three quarters of ‌similar net ⁠outflows before having to sell assets. It may also be able to increase borrowing. Meanwhile, maturing loans will bring in more cash. If BCRED’s credits repay about the same in 2026 as last year, and the fund uses half of the proceeds to redeem its debt, it will have nearly $6 billion more in reserve.

Still, volatile markets could see loan repayments slow, dragging down the value of BCRED’s assets. And the closer BDC funds get to exhausting their cash buffers, ​the more nervous investors will become.

If necessary, ​BCRED could limit quarterly redemptions to ⁠5% of net assets, or less. That would buy it time to raise cash by selling assets. But such a move would spook the private individuals who have piled into BDCs in recent years, and scare away retail investors ​that alternative asset managers hope will be a source of future funds. The debt markets’ most vibrant growth market ​could turn into ⁠a drag.

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Context News

  • Blackstone on March 2 said that the alternative asset manager and its employees invested $400 million into a loan fund to help the vehicle meet redemption demands from investors.
  • Blackstone Private Credit Fund, which had $82 billion of assets at the end of 2025, honored redemption requests equivalent to 7.9% of its shares, factoring in ⁠both a ​tender and the Blackstone share purchase, according to a regulatory statement.BCRED also drew in some $2 billion ​of new funds. Those numbers imply that net outflows were around $1.7 billion, according to Breakingviews calculations, before factoring in Blackstone’s $400 million investment.Blackstone shares fell 7.5% to $107.61 as of 1450 GMT on March 3, ​amid a broader selloff due to the conflict in Iran.

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Editing by Peter Thal Larsen; Production by Maya Nandhini

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Neil Unmack

Thomson Reuters

Neil Unmack is a Reuters Breakingviews Associate Editor based in London. He covers credit markets, hedge funds, and Italy. Previously he was a corporate finance reporter at Bloomberg News in London. He started his career as a financial journalist in 2001 at Euromoney Institutional Investor, where he covered structured finance for EuroWeek magazine. He was educated at Eton College and Oxford University, graduating with a first class degree in modern languages.

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