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Just caught something interesting happening in the private credit funds space that's worth paying attention to.
Blackstone's President Jon Gray just made headlines defending their massive BCRED fund after investors pulled out nearly 8% last quarter. We're talking about their flagship private credit funds operation with around $82 billion in the game. To handle the redemptions, Blackstone actually had to get their own investors to chip in $150 million just to facilitate the withdrawals. That's a pretty telling move.
Here's what's got people nervous though - this isn't just a Blackstone thing. Blue Owl was forced to find buyers for $1.4 billion worth of loans recently, partly to help cash out 30% of one of their struggling funds. When you start seeing major players in private credit funds having to do this kind of thing, it signals something broader might be shifting in the market.
Gray acknowledged there's basically a constant anxiety cycle happening right now. Investors get jittery, advisors get jittery, and suddenly everyone wants their money out. But here's his take - the software industry, which represents about 25% of BCRED's exposure and is their single biggest bet, won't be easy to liquidate even with all the AI disruption coming down the pipeline.
The real question is whether private credit funds can weather this redemption pressure without creating a cascading problem. When the biggest players start having to dip into their own pockets to satisfy withdrawals, it makes you wonder how much stress is actually building up underneath the surface.