Sector Overview & Capital Outflows:
- Persistent Redemption Pressure: Non-traded private credit funds marketed to wealthy retail investors are facing a severe second-quarter test as early regulatory filings show continued redemption requests driven by anxieties over software sector exposure, opaque asset valuations, and limited transparency.
- The Q1 Data Baseline: Across eight major private credit vehicles reviewed by Reuters, first-quarter redemptions hit a dataset record of $7.1 billion.
- The Closing Gate Window: Second-quarter redemption windows at key U.S. non-traded funds began closing last Friday, testing investor demand amid weaker overall fund-raising.
🏢 Key Fund Breakdowns & Actions This Week:
1. Blackstone ($BX.N)
- The Cap Activated: Blackstone officially capped withdrawals at its Blackstone Private Credit Fund (BCRED).
- Demand vs. Limits: Investors attempted to claw back 10% of outstanding shares during the Q2 tender offer, which is exactly double the fund’s strict 5% quarterly repurchase limit.
- Net Flows: Capital inflows sat at about 2% of Net Asset Value (NAV), triggering a net outflow of roughly 3% of NAV. Management noted that portfolio repayments and new inflows still outpaced share repurchases, and that onshore investor redemption demand actually eased later in the offer period compared to Q1.
2. Cliffwater
- Escalating Requests: In a shareholder letter sent Tuesday, Cliffwater revealed that investors in its flagship $31.3 billion Corporate Lending Fund submitted requests to redeem 17% of shares in the second quarter.
- The Repurchase Cap: Due to the surge, actual redemptions were strictly capped at 5%.
- Quarter-over-Quarter Worsening: The 17% Q2 request rate marks a clear escalation from the first quarter, when investor withdrawal requests sat at 14% (and were capped at 7%).
- Fund Structure: Operating as an interval fund legally required to make periodic share repurchase offers, the vehicle holds roughly 4,000 assets, consisting of direct corporate loans and stakes in external investment firms’ funds.
