Blue Owl Capital held its 5% quarterly withdrawal limit on two flagship private credit funds even as redemption requests dropped to $4.7 billion in the second quarter, down from $5.4 billion in the prior period.
The New York-based alternative asset manager, which oversees $315 billion in assets, said investors sought to pull $4.7 billion from the Blue Owl Credit Income Corp and Blue Owl Technology Income Corp funds combined, according to shareholder letters released Thursday. While the total eased 13% from the first quarter, it remained well above the 5% cap the firm imposes on quarterly tender offers.
"We believe OCIC's strong performance over the past three months has reflected the quality of portfolio fundamentals and contributed to improved investor sentiment," Craig Packer and Logan Nicholson, executives at Blue Owl, said in the shareholder letter.
The flagship $33.8 billion OCIC fund, the second-largest non-traded business development company, saw repurchase requests fall to 18.8% from 21.9% in the prior quarter. Roughly 90% of investors stayed invested, with limited new participants joining the redemption queue, the firm said. The $4.9 billion technology-focused OTIC fund recorded a smaller decline, with tender requests slipping to 38.1% from 40.7%.
OTIC redemptions remain far above industry levels
Blue Owl has become a bellwether for the liquidity pressures gripping private credit markets. Wealthy investors have pulled billions from non-traded BDCs in recent months, driven by concerns over lending standards and fears that artificial intelligence disruption could hit software companies that borrowed heavily from direct lenders.
OTIC's 38.1% repurchase rate far exceeded the 9% to 17% range reported by the largest non-traded BDC managers for the second quarter. Blue Owl attributed the elevated level to the fund's concentrated shareholder base and specialized technology mandate. While most of Blue Owl's wealth products target U.S. investors, OTIC has a notable concentration in Asia, executives have said.
Oaktree Capital Management and Goldman Sachs Group were among the firms that bucked the broader trend, posting lower repurchase requests in the period.
What's at stake for private credit
The sustained redemption pressure carries implications beyond Blue Owl. Non-traded BDCs, which offer quarterly liquidity of up to 5% of shares, have become a key channel for retail investors to access private credit assets. If withdrawal requests remain elevated, fund managers may face pressure to sell assets into a thin market, potentially triggering valuation write-downs across the sector.
Blue Owl shares have fallen roughly 56% over the past 12 months. The firm abandoned a plan late last year to merge two of its private credit funds after the proposal stoked broader anxiety about the stability of private credit vehicles and sent its stock tumbling.
Market participants expect withdrawal requests to stay above the 5% cap for at least several more quarters, though some Wall Street analysts believe the second quarter may represent the peak of the redemption cycle.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.