--- title: "Over $20 Billion in Q1 Withdrawals! Private Credit Myth Shattered as Giants like Blackstone and Apollo Global Face Redemption Wave" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/282190049.md" description: "In the first quarter, U.S. private credit funds received redemption requests totaling $20.8 billion, affecting industry giants such as Blackstone, Apollo Global, ARES Management LP, Blue Owl Capital, and KKR. These funds collectively manage approximately $300 billion in investment portfolios but have only fulfilled just over half of the requests so far, forcing many investors to wait for redemption windows later this quarter to exit" datetime: "2026-04-09T12:01:14.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/282190049.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282190049.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/282190049.md) --- # Over $20 Billion in Q1 Withdrawals! Private Credit Myth Shattered as Giants like Blackstone and Apollo Global Face Redemption Wave The private credit industry is facing its most severe crisis of confidence since its rise following the 2008 financial crisis. According to calculations by the _Financial Times_, **in the first quarter, private credit funds received redemption requests totaling $20.8 billion, impacting industry giants such as Blackstone, Apollo Global, ARES Management LP, Blue Owl Capital, and KKR.** **These funds collectively manage approximately $300 billion in investment portfolios, but have only honored slightly over half of the redemption requests so far, forcing many investors to wait for redemption windows later this quarter to exit.** **Moody's downgraded its outlook for the private credit industry this week, citing "intensifying" redemption pressures faced by funds.** Morgan Stanley expects the industry's default rate to climb from the current 5% to 8% over the next year, **largely due to the sector's significant exposure to software companies.** Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department have launched reviews into this wave of redemptions, and JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon warned this week that loan losses for highly leveraged companies will exceed market expectations due to loosening lending standards. ## Redemption Wave Sweeps Industry Giants, Retail Investors Become Biggest Variable The protagonists of this redemption wave are wealthy individual investors, whom the private credit industry has been actively cultivating in recent years. Unlike institutional investors such as pension funds and endowments, which make decisions with a long-term perspective, retail investors are generally more sensitive and volatile, and have long harbored dissatisfaction with the redemption restrictions commonly imposed on private credit products. Faced with a surge of redemption requests, institutions have adopted distinctly different response strategies. Blackstone and Oaktree have chosen to honor redemptions proactively, even when requests exceed the 5% trigger threshold, in order to maintain market confidence; in contrast, BlackRock's HPS Investment Partners, Apollo Global, ARES Management LP, Blue Owl Capital, and Morgan Stanley have opted to limit redemptions, arguing that such caps protect remaining investors in the funds and prevent assets from being sold at a forced discount. Jefferies analyst Daniel Fannon noted, "While fund managers repeatedly claim there are no underlying credit issues in their portfolios, this has not deterred retail investors from lining up to retrieve their capital." ## Software Company Exposure and Aging LBOs Pose Dual Risks Behind this redemption wave lies a deep-seated market doubt about the quality of private credit's underlying assets. In recent years, the private credit industry has provided substantial financing to software companies backed by private equity. The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence technology is reshaping the competitive landscape of the entire software sector, posing disruptive challenges to the business models of related enterprises. Concurrently, private equity firms are saddled with aging leveraged buyout (LBO) deals that have been slow to exit. The financing for most of these transactions came from private credit. With high interest rates and a sluggish M&A market, the liquidity risk of these assets is now being transmitted to private credit funds. Greg Obenshain, credit director at Verdad Advisers, stated that investor departures are often "the first chapter of most credit cycles." "Fund flows are both a forward-looking indicator of distress—as it reflects market expectations of future trouble—and a mechanism that helps reveal distress itself." ## Manager PR Counteroffensive, but Regulators and Rating Agencies Have Intervened Amidst an increasingly unfavorable public opinion environment, both Blackstone and Apollo Global have launched public relations offensives to try to reverse the negative narrative surrounding the private credit industry. Blue Owl Capital Co-President Craig Packer also told investors in one of its funds that there is a "significant disconnect between how private credit is described in public discussions and the actual trends in our portfolios." However, regulatory attention is becoming unavoidable. The Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department have initiated reviews into this wave of redemptions, and Moody's also downgraded its industry outlook this week, listing "intensifying redemption pressures" as a core risk factor. ## Redemption Caps Support Scale, But Industry Growth Momentum Shows Cracks Notably, despite the fierce redemption wave, many funds continue to see their managed assets grow due to the existence of redemption caps. According to investment bank RA Stanger, the industry raised $3.5 billion through Business Development Companies (BDCs), a mainstream private credit investment vehicle, from January to February this year, with billions more flowing into interval funds. However, some Wall Street analysts believe that if the macroeconomic downturn becomes more widespread, the private credit industry will face even more severe tests. This asset class rapidly emerged after the 2008 financial crisis, capitalizing on tightening regulations as asset managers filled the financing gap left by large banks exiting the market, attracting substantial capital from pension funds and endowments with attractive returns. Today, with the dual pressures of redemption waves and regulatory scrutiny, the continuation of this myth is facing an unprecedented challenge. ### Related Stocks - [KKR.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/KKR.US.md) - [OWL.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/OWL.US.md) - [PEX.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/PEX.US.md) - [KKR-D.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/KKR-D.US.md) - [ARES.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/ARES.US.md) - [BX.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/BX.US.md) - [APO.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/APO.US.md) - [OBDC.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/OBDC.US.md) - [BXMT.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/BXMT.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [ANALYSIS-Private credit sector stresses could be catastrophic, but not just yet](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281747304.md) - [Shikiar Asset Management Inc. 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