--- title: "Crisis intensifies! Blackstone and other private credit giants face a redemption wave of 10 billion: only agreeing to pay out 70%" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/279214359.md" description: "Blackstone and other private credit funds are facing a redemption wave of billions, with managers agreeing to only about 70% of the requests, leading to a reevaluation of the valuations of related listed companies. In the first quarter of this year, some large private credit funds encountered redemption requests exceeding USD 10 billion, and the redemption scale is expected to rise further in the next two weeks. The stock prices of related private equity firms have generally fallen by more than 25%, with a market value evaporating by over USD 100 billion, prompting investors to reassess the growth and valuation reliant on retail private credit products" datetime: "2026-03-16T06:51:28.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/279214359.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/279214359.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/279214359.md) --- > Supported Languages: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/279214359.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/279214359.md) # Crisis intensifies! Blackstone and other private credit giants face a redemption wave of 10 billion: only agreeing to pay out 70% Private credit funds targeting wealthy individuals are facing concentrated redemptions, prompting fund managers to initiate redemption restrictions, agreeing to pay out only about 70% of requests. One of Wall Street's most important growth engines is under "slowdown" pressure, and the valuations of related publicly listed private capital companies are being reassessed. According to the Financial Times, in the first quarter of this year, some of the largest private credit funds faced over $10 billion in redemption requests, involving institutions such as Blackstone, BlackRock, Cliffwater, Morgan Stanley, and Monroe Capital. The debt funds managed by these institutions agreed to pay out only about 70% of the $10.1 billion in redemption requests, with the remainder deferred. In the next two weeks, as Ares Management, Apollo Global, Blue Owl, Oaktree, and Goldman Sachs complete their statistics, the scale of these redemptions is expected to rise. The rapid withdrawal of funds is quickly transmitting to the secondary market. The stock prices of related private capital companies have generally fallen by 25% or more this year, with a total market value evaporating by over $100 billion. Investors are beginning to **reassess the fee-based growth and valuation premium supported by retail private credit products.** ## **Over $10 billion in redemptions in Q1, payouts forced to be discounted by 30%** The Financial Times estimates that the debt funds under Blackstone, BlackRock, Cliffwater, Morgan Stanley, and Monroe Capital faced a total of **$10.1 billion in redemption requests in the first quarter, agreeing to pay out about 70% of that.** Redemption pressure is still spreading. Reports indicate that in the next two weeks, Ares Management, Apollo Global, Blue Owl, Oaktree, and Goldman Sachs will successively complete the statistics of investor redemption applications, and the market expects the total redemption amount to further increase. In terms of asset size, the funds that have disclosed redemption situations manage a total of about $166 billion in portfolios, which is still only a small part of the approximately $15 trillion direct lending market. However, these products belong to one of the fastest-growing segments of the private investment industry, and their capital fluctuations have a greater marginal impact on the managers' **"growth narrative."** ## **From net inflows to net outflows, Wall Street's growth engine faces headwinds** This round of redemptions has reversed the trend of capital inflows that had persisted for many years. Over the past five years, large private debt funds have attracted nearly $200 billion in inflows, driving the industry's scale and profitability expansion. **When redemptions lead to withdrawal restrictions, investors' expectations for sustainable growth immediately cool.** Redemption restrictions themselves have become a trigger point for risk pricing. The fact that multiple funds agreed to pay out only about 70% of redemption requests means that investors cannot always retrieve their full funds when needed, which undermines the appeal of semi-liquid private credit products. Goldman Sachs analysts estimate that the asset size of retail private credit funds has grown from $34 billion at the end of 2021 to $222 billion at the end of last year, but this growth has begun to reverse this year **After the redemption wave highlights the risk of "not being able to exit at any time," Goldman Sachs expects such funds to lose $45 billion to $70 billion in assets over the next two years.** ## **Fee-based income becomes a market focus, influencing valuations** For publicly listed managers, retail private credit funds not only represent asset scale but also directly correspond to predictable management and incentive fee income. Blackstone's $48 billion Bcred debt fund has become its largest single source of fees, **accounting for approximately 13% of the total fee income of this $1.3 trillion asset management company.** Bcred charges Blackstone an annual management fee of 1.25% and a performance fee of 12.5% after reaching a minimum return threshold of 5%. Last year, this fund contributed approximately $1.2 billion in fee income to Blackstone. On the Blue Owl side, its $35 billion private fund OCIC is also crucial for growth, having paid Blue Owl approximately $447 million in management and incentive fees last year. Goldman Sachs analysts estimate that Blue Owl's reliance on such funds aimed at wealthy individuals is the highest in the industry, **with about 21% of annual fee-related income linked to these products.** At the industry level, reports indicate that private equity firms have emphasized more predictable fee-based income in recent years to enhance their appeal to equity investors, driving their **valuations to reach 30 to 40 times fee-based income** at one point. The cost is that once retail funds withdraw en masse during market turmoil, fee growth expectations may quickly adjust downward. ## **Stock prices collectively retreat, market re-prices "growth certainty"** The primary market consequence of the redemption wave is widespread selling of private equity stocks. Reports show that companies like Blackstone, KKR, Blue Owl, Ares, and Apollo have all **declined by 25% or more this year**, with a total market value loss exceeding $100 billion. Vulcan Value Partners CEO told the Financial Times that the entire industry is under significant pressure. He also pointed out that **the market sell-off has not adequately differentiated between the strengths and weaknesses of business models**, with some companies that rely more on relatively stable funding sources like pensions and endowments being treated the same way. The report also emphasizes that companies like Blackstone and Blue Owl do not hold loans on their own balance sheets, so their direct credit loss exposure is not the core of market volatility. The main reason is **investors' re-evaluation of future growth, retail fund stability, and the sustainability of fee-based income.** Risk Warning and Disclaimer The market has risks, and investments should be made cautiously. This article does not constitute personal investment advice and does not take into account individual users' specific investment goals, financial situations, or needs. Users should consider whether any opinions, views, or conclusions in this article align with their specific circumstances. Investing based on this is at one's own risk ### Related Stocks - [Blackstone Inc. (BX.US)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/BX.US.md) - [Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. (BXMT.US)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/BXMT.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [ROI-Private credit alarm bells echo 2007 subprime warnings: McGeever](https://longbridge.com/en/news/278561771.md) - [Blackstone Revives Plan to Sell Canary Wharf Office Building](https://longbridge.com/en/news/278913676.md) - [More Private Credit Mangers Will 'Hold the Line': Hirsch](https://longbridge.com/en/news/278931045.md) - [BUZZ-Street View: Allowing excess withdrawals from credit funds could redefine permanent capital](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277647106.md) - [KKR Credit Income Fund Posts Slight Dip in Estimated NTA](https://longbridge.com/en/news/278786837.md)