--- title: "Blue Owl's suspension of redemptions triggers a chain reaction: private credit fund fundraising drops 40% in January" description: "Blackstone's flagship product Bcred sold a total of $1.1 billion in the first two months of this year, with an average monthly sales exceeding $1 billion last year; Apollo's product Apollo Debt Soluti" type: "news" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/277426658.md" published_at: "2026-03-02T08:11:08.000Z" --- # Blue Owl's suspension of redemptions triggers a chain reaction: private credit fund fundraising drops 40% in January > Blackstone's flagship product Bcred sold a total of $1.1 billion in the first two months of this year, with an average monthly sales exceeding $1 billion last year; Apollo's product Apollo Debt Solutions had sales of approximately $150 million in February, a 72% decline compared to last year's average monthly level. The private equity industry is facing a funding gap of "redemptions exceeding subscriptions," raising market concerns about a repeat of a liquidity crisis Blue Owl has permanently frozen redemptions for its non-traded funds, shaking wealthy investors' confidence in the entire private credit asset class, **and triggering an industry-wide financing crisis.** According to investment bank RA Stanger, in January this year, the subscription scale for non-traded business development companies (BDCs) aimed at retail and high-net-worth individual investors **plummeted by 40% month-on-month to $3.2 billion.** As capital inflows significantly shrink, several executives told the Financial Times that the **redemption scale for some leading funds may soon exceed new subscriptions, and the risk of funding gaps is rising.** Patrick Dwyer, a wealth advisor at NewEdge Wealth in Miami, stated that after Blue Owl announced the halt on redemptions, he spent the entire week addressing clients' concerns about the entire industry. A head of a private credit company bluntly remarked that this incident **"will truly freeze the retail channel."** ## **Blue Owl's Redemption Halt Sparks Confidence Crisis** Blue Owl announced this month that it would permanently stop redemptions for one of its non-traded funds, which is seen as a direct catalyst for the spread of this round of selling sentiment. Financial advisors indicated that, faced with clients showing signs of fatigue, they are finding it increasingly difficult to defend this asset class. Meanwhile, several publicly traded funds under KKR, Apollo Global Management, and BlackRock have experienced asset write-downs, further intensifying scrutiny of this asset class. This series of adverse factors, combined with the downward pressure on yields brought about by the Federal Reserve's interest rate cut cycle and the rising loan default rates, has continued to weaken the attractiveness of private credit. Patrick Dwyer expressed that he believes investors should still hold exposure to private credit, but emphasized that this type of asset is not suitable for everyone: "Private credit is a non-liquid asset class, suitable only for investors who can truly withstand a lack of liquidity." ## **Sales of Leading Funds Cool Down** According to the Financial Times' analysis of monthly disclosure data from various funds, in January and February this year, **sales of most funds have noticeably slowed down.** Specifically: > Blackstone's flagship product Bcred, with a scale of $82.5 billion, **had total sales of about $1.1 billion in the first two months of this year, while its average monthly sales exceeded $1 billion last year**; Apollo's Apollo Debt Solutions, with a scale of $25.1 billion, had sales of about $150 million in February, **down 72% from last year's monthly average**; sales of private credit funds under BlackRock HPS Investment Partners, Ares, and Blue Owl have also slowed down. It is worth noting that these figures do not include reinvested dividends, which annually provide billions of dollars in funding to each fund through automatic rollovers, thus the actual funding situation is slightly better than the surface numbers. Meanwhile, **redemption pressure cannot be underestimated.** In the fourth quarter of last year, funds were generally able to cover redemption requests with new subscriptions, significantly reducing the need to tap into other liquidity sources; currently, this buffer condition is rapidly disappearing ## **History Repeats? The Market Mirrors the 2022 Breit Incident** Executives in the wealth management industry generally compare the current situation to the 2022 Blackstone Breit incident. At that time, Breit was forced to limit withdrawals due to massive redemptions, becoming a symbolic case of the pressure faced by semi-liquid funds during a collective exit by retail investors. Although Breit ultimately weathered the market turmoil and achieved strong returns last year, the fallout from the incident led to a general stagnation in the sales of similar real estate funds, with some investors choosing to exit due to dissatisfaction with gatekeeping arrangements or concerns about a backlog in redemption queues. A portfolio strategist from a large asset management company raised the most concerning question in the market: "Will this event impact non-traded BDCs similarly to how the Breit incident affected non-traded REITs—various disputes and reports have led people to say 'I wouldn't touch that with a ten-foot pole'?" ## **Responses from All Sides: Liquidity Reserves and Asset Sales** In the face of potential redemption pressure, fund executives stated that they have prepared sufficient liquidity contingency plans, including bank credit lines and liquid loan portfolios. Funds under Blue Owl and New Mountain Capital have both sold loan portfolios this month to strengthen their liquidity reserves. However, industry insiders remain cautious about the outlook. According to a report by the Financial Times citing an unnamed private equity firm executive, **this round of turmoil will significantly raise the entry barriers for retail channels.** Once this barrier is raised, the entire industry will face a more severe test in its strategy of relying on high-net-worth client funds to drive growth ### Related Stocks - [OWL.US - Blue Owl Capital](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/OWL.US.md) - [APO.US - Apollo Global](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/APO.US.md) - [OBDC.US - Blue Owl Capital](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/OBDC.US.md) ## Related News & Research | Title | Description | URL | |-------|-------------|-----| | Blue Owl fallout sets off retail-investor panic. Their advisers are urging calm. | The private-markets giant hosted a call to reassure wealth advisers who connect clients to its funds. | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276870393.md) | | Kuvare Holdings Comments on Recent Press Coverage Addressing Matters Involving Relationship with Blue Owl Capital | Kuvare Holdings issued a statement addressing recent media reports about its relationship with Blue Owl Capital. Contrar | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276824309.md) | | No Fed, no safety net: Why private credit's first real recession will be its moment of truth | The private credit market, nearing $2 trillion, faces significant risks as it has never been tested through a full reces | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277110321.md) | | Hedge funds offer locked-up private credit investors a way out - at a hefty discount | Two investment funds, Saba Capital and Cox Capital Management, are offering exits to investors in Blue Owl Capital Corp. | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276581637.md) | | 12,831 Shares in Apollo Global Management Inc. $APO Purchased by Equitable Trust Co. | Equitable Trust Co. acquired 12,831 shares of Apollo Global Management Inc. (NYSE:APO) in Q3, valued at approximately $1 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276709091.md) | --- > **Disclaimer**: This article is for reference only and does not constitute any investment advice.