Interesting timing on Blackstone's latest filing. Jon Gray basically just confirmed what everyone's been watching - their massive $82 billion BCRED fund saw nearly 8% of investors pull out last quarter. That's the kind of move that gets people talking in the private credit funds space.



What caught my attention is how they handled it. Rather than letting the fund get squeezed, Blackstone threw in $150 million of their own money to facilitate the redemptions smoothly. Smart optics, honestly. But it also signals something - even the biggest players in private credit funds are feeling the pressure from nervous LPs.

Gray's pushing back on the narrative though. He's saying the credit quality is solid, especially on their software exposure which sits at like 25% of the fund. His argument: those loans aren't going anywhere despite AI disruption. Fair point, but I get why investors are spooked. You've got Blue Owl literally having to find buyers for $1.4 billion in loans just to let people cash out of one of their credit funds. When that's happening across the industry, it changes the vibe.

The thing is, Gray's not wrong about the "spin cycle" - there's definitely a feedback loop where redemption fears trigger more redemptions. But the broader question about private credit funds' resilience in a softer economy? That's the real conversation happening right now. Blackstone's size usually means they can weather this stuff, but it's worth watching how this plays out across the sector.
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