The illusion of infinite liquidity in private credit is officially cracking. Market jitters have triggered a massive wave of withdrawal requests, forcing Wall Street’s biggest mega-managers to throw up the gates and curb investor redemptions.
📉 THE MACRO SQUEEZE: U.S. banks currently have $300 billion in outstanding loans to private-credit providers (plus $340B in unused commitments). But as AI threatens the recurring revenue models of legacy software companies—a massive lending hub for private credit—investors are rushing for the exit.
🛡️ THE MEGA-FUND DEFENSES: To avoid forced asset sales during this market dislocation, the biggest players are actively throttling liquidity:
- JPMorgan: Actively marking down the value of software-exposed loans to private credit funds.
- BlackRock (HLEND): Hit its 5% withdrawal cap after receiving a massive $1.2B in redemption requests.
- Blackstone (BCRED): Forced to raise its redemption cap to 7% to absorb a $3.7B surge in withdrawal requests.
- Morgan Stanley: Limited redemptions on its PIF fund, fulfilling only ~45.8% of investor tender requests.
- Blue Owl: Liquidating $1.4B in assets across three funds specifically to generate cash for redemptions.
💡 THE BOTTOM LINE: Private credit was built on the premise of “patient capital,” but retail and institutional investors are suddenly losing their patience. When the entire Mount Rushmore of alternative asset management (BlackRock, Blackstone, Morgan Stanley) hits redemption caps at the exact same time, it signals a systemic repricing of credit risk.
👇 Private Credit & Risk Professionals: With JPMorgan already marking down software loans, are these redemption caps a temporary liquidity hiccup, or the start of a massive deleveraging cycle?
