On June 25, Blackstone declined 3.51% overnight, trading at 107.62 USD/share, with turnover of approximately 545,000 USD. The decline reflects intensifying liquidity concerns across the private credit industry as multiple major firms impose redemption restrictions.
On the news front, the private credit redemption wave continues to spread. Apollo's approximately $26 billion private credit fund ADS saw Q2 redemption requests surge to nearly 17%, prompting the firm to cap quarterly withdrawals at 5%. Morgan Stanley's $7 billion North Haven Private Income Fund similarly set a 5% redemption cap after investors sought to redeem 11.6% of outstanding shares in Q2, up from 10.9% in Q1. Blackstone's own $79 billion private credit fund BCRED had previously implemented similar restrictions due to surging redemption requests.
Industry professionals have warned that the current wave of mass redemptions is stress-testing the underlying funding mechanics of semi-liquid private credit products, with the structural mismatch between illiquid assets and retail-accessible distribution channels becoming increasingly apparent. The successive imposition of redemption gates by multiple institutions has fueled broader concerns about systemic liquidity risks in alternative asset management.
(The above content is based on publicly available market information, generated by a program or algorithm, and is intended solely as a stock movement alert. It does not constitute investment advice or a basis for trading decisions.)
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