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Blackstone Gates Its $80 Billion Private Credit Fund — And It's Not the Only One

On June 4, 2026, Blackstone disclosed in a shareholder letter filed with the SEC that its flagship Blackstone Private Credit Fund — known as BCRED — would cap redemptions at 5% of outstanding shares for the second quarter [1]. Withdrawal requests had reached approximately 10% of outstanding shares, meaning investors who asked for their money back would receive roughly 50 cents on the dollar, with the remainder locked in until the next quarterly window [1][2].

It was the first time BCRED, the world's largest private credit vehicle with $79–82 billion in total investments and roughly $47.6 billion in net asset value, had formally gated redemptions since its 2021 launch [3][4]. But BCRED is not an outlier. Across the private credit industry, every major semi-liquid fund hit or exceeded its redemption caps in the first half of 2026 — a stress test that has exposed fundamental questions about the product category itself [5].

The Scale of BCRED

BCRED is a non-traded Business Development Company, or BDC — a structure that allows retail and high-net-worth investors to access private credit markets that were historically reserved for institutional allocators. The fund is managed by Blackstone Credit, a subsidiary of Blackstone Inc., which manages approximately $520 billion in credit assets under management [3].

The fund's offering documents specify a quarterly repurchase cap of 5% of net asset value, with a monthly sub-limit of 2% [4]. These terms are not hidden — they appear in the prospectus and represent a contractual feature of the fund's semi-liquid structure. When requests exceed the cap, each investor's redemption is reduced proportionally, a mechanism known as pro-rata allocation [6].

The path to the June gate was gradual. In Q4 2025, BCRED received $2.1 billion in redemption requests and fulfilled them within normal limits. In Q1 2026, requests jumped to $3.7 billion — approximately 7.9% of NAV — and the fund's board took the unusual step of raising the quarterly repurchase limit to 7% [7]. Blackstone senior executives and the firm's balance sheet contributed personal capital to cover the remaining gap of roughly $400 million, ensuring no investor was gated that quarter [7]. By Q2 2026, requests had grown further, and the standard 5% cap was enforced [1].

NAV per share had declined modestly from approximately $25.09 to $24.97 heading into 2026 [7]. While the decline was not dramatic, it contributed to investor anxiety about the trajectory of the underlying portfolio.

A Sector-Wide Problem

BCRED's gating would be less significant if it were an isolated event. It is not. The data from Q1 2026 alone tells a story of industry-wide stress.

Q1 2026 Redemption Requests vs. 5% Cap (% of NAV)

Blue Owl's OTIC fund saw redemption requests reach an extraordinary 40.7% of NAV, with its OCIC fund at 21.9% [5]. Cliffwater's $31 billion Corporate Lending Fund faced requests of 17% [5]. Ares and Apollo's flagship semi-liquid BDCs received requests of 11.6% and 11.2% respectively — each more than double their 5% caps [8]. Carlyle's Private Credit Fund also exceeded its 5% limit [8].

Industry-wide, non-traded perpetual BDC redemptions ran at 9–10% of NAV in Q1 2026, up from 4.5% in Q4 2025 and just 1.6% in Q3 2025 [5]. The acceleration was sharp and broad-based.

The market reaction was swift. Blue Owl's stock fell 7% to a record low when its gating was announced in early April 2026 [5]. The broader alternative asset management sector declined roughly 3%, and the redemption wave eliminated over $100 billion in combined market capitalization across Blackstone, KKR, Apollo, Ares, and Blue Owl [5][9].

What Drove the Redemption Surge

Multiple factors converged to trigger the wave of withdrawal requests.

Rising default rates. The trailing 12-month default rate on below-investment-grade loans reached 5.5% as of January 31, 2026, compared to 3.4% for high-yield bonds [10]. Fitch reported a 6% default rate over the prior year — the highest since August 2024 [10]. These are not catastrophic numbers by historical standards, but they represent a meaningful deterioration from the near-zero default environment of 2021–2022 that attracted many investors to the asset class.

Software sector distress. Software and services companies constitute 16% of outstanding debt in the Morningstar LSTA Leveraged Loan Index and 26% of index capital [10]. More than half of the software sector carried ratings of B-minus or below — classified as "highly speculative" by Fitch — and a record $25 billion in speculative-rated software loans were trading below 80 cents on the dollar [10]. Blackstone itself acknowledged problem loans to "software companies and dental clinics" [7].

The interest rate environment. While the Federal Reserve has cut the federal funds rate from its 2023 peak of 5.33% to 3.63% as of May 2026, rates remain elevated by post-2008 standards [11]. The 10-year Treasury yield stood at approximately 4.5% in early June 2026 [12], making traditional fixed-income instruments more competitive with private credit's yield premium — and prompting some investors to rotate back into public markets.

Federal Funds Effective Rate
Source: FRED / Federal Reserve Board
Data as of May 1, 2026CSV
10-Year Treasury Yield
Source: FRED / Federal Reserve Board
Data as of Jun 3, 2026CSV

Contagion dynamics. The threat of gating itself appears to have accelerated redemption requests. Research on fund gating mechanisms shows that the announcement or anticipation of caps can trigger preemptive withdrawal requests, as investors rush to get into the queue before restrictions bind — creating a self-reinforcing cycle [6][13].

The Structural Mismatch

At the heart of this episode is a tension that critics have flagged for years: private credit loans typically carry maturities of 3–7 years and trade in thin secondary markets, yet the funds holding them offer quarterly or even monthly redemption windows [14].

The semi-liquid private credit sector has grown rapidly. By year-end 2025, funds with private-asset exposure and limited liquidity exceeded $534 billion in AUM, having added roughly $100 billion in just 12 months [14]. More than half of the hundreds of semiliquid funds now operating in the U.S. were launched in the past three years [14].

Semi-Liquid Private Credit Fund AUM ($B)
Source: Morningstar, Preqin
Data as of Mar 31, 2026CSV

JPMorgan Asset Management CEO George Gatch publicly warned that private credit funds should not be marketed as "semi-liquid," arguing that the underlying assets remain fundamentally illiquid regardless of the redemption windows layered on top [14]. Kaush Amin of U.S. Bank's Asset Management Group offered a similar assessment: "The primary issue is a mismatch in terms between the underlying loans and the redemption features of many of these funds" [10].

The concern is what some analysts call a "doom loop": redemption requests exceeding caps force funds to raise cash, increase borrowing, or sell assets at unfavorable prices, which erodes fund performance and triggers further redemption requests [14]. Whether this dynamic is playing out or merely being feared is an open question — but the fear itself is shaping investor behavior.

The Case That Gating Works

Not everyone views the gates as a sign of failure. The Investment Company Institute, a trade group for regulated funds, published a defense arguing that "private credit funds are working precisely as designed" [15]. The gates, in this view, are a feature — not a bug — that prevents forced asset sales at depressed prices, protecting remaining investors from bearing the cost of others' early exits.

The strongest precedent is Blackstone's own experience with its Real Estate Income Trust, or BREIT. In November 2022, BREIT began gating redemptions after requests surged amid rising interest rates and concerns about commercial real estate valuations [16]. The BREIT crisis played out over 14 months, during which Blackstone met redemption requests gradually without fire-selling assets. By February 2024, 100% of requests were being fulfilled [16]. NAV was broadly preserved.

Blackstone CEO Stephen Schwarzman addressed the BREIT gating directly at the time: "We set up the product with limitations on liquidity...because we knew at some point there would be a period of volatility, and we didn't want to sell assets at the wrong time under pressure" [16].

The historical parallel to open-ended property funds in the U.K. during 2008 and 2020 offers further evidence. British property funds that gated during periods of stress generally preserved NAV better than those that attempted to meet all redemptions through forced sales [17]. The funds that sold assets under pressure realized discounts of 15–30% to appraised values, directly harming investors who chose to stay [17].

For BCRED specifically, Blackstone has noted that the fund's portfolio is primarily composed of first-lien senior secured loans — the highest-priority tranche in a borrower's capital structure — which historically exhibit lower loss rates than subordinated debt even during credit downturns [3][7].

What Trapped Investors Face

For investors whose redemptions were only partially filled, the immediate question is: when can they get their money out?

Under the current gate structure, unfulfilled requests do not automatically carry forward to the next quarter — investors must resubmit [4]. If redemption demand persists at current levels, investors could face multiple quarters of partial fulfillment. The BREIT precedent suggests a resolution timeline of roughly 12–14 months, but private credit assets differ from real estate in their liquidity characteristics, and past performance during BREIT's gate period does not guarantee a similar outcome for BCRED.

If Blackstone needed to sell underlying loans to meet redemptions, secondary-market pricing provides some indication of the discount involved. Private credit secondaries priced at 92% of NAV on average in the first half of 2025, and some continuation vehicles priced at par or even a premium [18][19]. However, distressed, mezzanine, and opportunistic credit — including the software loans weighing on BCRED's portfolio — traded at steeper discounts [18]. The credit secondaries market handled roughly $18–20 billion in deal volume in 2025, a fraction of the hundreds of billions locked in semi-liquid structures [19].

The Morningstar LSTA U.S. Leveraged Loan Index was down more than 2% in February 2026, suggesting that forced sales in the current environment would not command favorable pricing [10].

The Regulatory Landscape

The timing of this stress test is awkward for the SEC. In recent years, the Commission has moved to expand retail access to private markets — removing the longstanding 15% cap on private fund investments by retail closed-end funds and issuing a no-action letter in April 2026 allowing co-investments by open-end funds [20][21].

Existing regulations provide some guardrails. BCRED and similar BDCs operate under the Investment Company Act of 1940, which requires independent boards, SEC reporting, and leverage limits [20]. SEC Rule 22e-4, adopted in 2016, requires open-ended funds to implement formal liquidity risk management programs [20]. Interval funds — a related structure — must offer repurchases of 5–25% of outstanding shares at NAV at regular intervals [20].

But critics argue these protections are insufficient for the scale of retail money now flowing into private credit. Better Markets, a financial reform advocacy organization, has argued that "retail investors will be ripped off in private markets with SEC approval," contending that expanding access to illiquid alternatives benefits Wall Street asset managers more than the retail investors they serve [22].

An investor investigation has been opened by the law firm Meyer Wilson Werning into BCRED's redemption surge, examining whether investors were adequately informed of liquidity risks [4]. Whether this leads to enforcement action or litigation remains to be seen.

Traditional banks hold an estimated $1.2 trillion in private credit exposure, raising broader systemic concerns that extend beyond the retail investor base [20].

What Comes Next

The private credit industry faces a credibility test. The semi-liquid label attracted hundreds of billions in capital from investors who were told — accurately, in the contractual fine print — that their money could be locked up during periods of stress. What many of those investors may not have fully internalized is that "semi-liquid" means "mostly illiquid when it matters most."

The bull case is that the gates will hold, credit quality will stabilize, and the current episode will be remembered the way BREIT is now remembered — as a temporary stress event that the structure absorbed. Significant loan maturities concentrated in 2028–2029 could create additional pressure points [10], but Blackstone's track record of navigating BREIT's gate period gives some basis for confidence.

The bear case is that rising defaults, particularly in the software sector, will erode NAV in ways that current marks have not yet reflected, that preemptive redemption requests will continue to overwhelm gates, and that the structural mismatch between illiquid assets and semi-liquid wrappers will prove to be a category-level flaw rather than a manageable friction.

The answer likely depends on whether borrower defaults remain contained. At 5.5%, the default rate is elevated but not extreme. If it climbs meaningfully higher — particularly if the economic slowdown broadens — the managed orderliness of the current gating could give way to something less controlled. For now, the gates are holding. The question is whether the pressure behind them will ease before something breaks.

Sources (22)

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    Blackstone Private Credit Fund caps redemptions for the first time since its 2021 launch as withdrawal requests double the quarterly limit.

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    Investigation opened into BCRED's redemption terms, including the 5% quarterly cap and 2% monthly sub-limit, and whether investors were adequately informed of liquidity risks.

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    Non-traded BDC redemptions ran at 9-10% of NAV in Q1 2026. Blue Owl OTIC saw 40.7% requests; OCIC 21.9%; Cliffwater 17%. Over $100B in market cap erased across the sector.

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