Executive Summary
- Blue Owl Capital experienced $5.4 billion in redemption requests across two flagship private-credit vehicles during Q1 2026.
- Withdrawal requests accounted for 21.9% of the $36B Credit Income fund’s assets and 40.7% of the $3B technology-oriented fund.
- The firm is enforcing its 5% quarterly withdrawal cap as outlined in original fund agreements.
- Shares of OWL tumbled 5.4% to $8.24 on Thursday, extending year-to-date losses beyond 40%.
- Industry peers like Ares Management experienced similar declines as private credit vehicles hemorrhage over $11B across two quarters.
Shares of Blue Owl Capital (OWL) traded at $8.24 on Thursday, declining 5.4% following revelations of substantial investor withdrawal demands from its two primary private-credit investment vehicles.
The equity had already retreated 4.6% during Wednesday’s session, bringing total year-to-date losses to more than 40% — positioning it among the most significant declines within the publicly listed alternative asset management sector.
Investment partners submitted withdrawal requests totaling $5.4 billion from Blue Owl Credit Income Corp. and Blue Owl Technology Income Corp. (OTIC) throughout the opening quarter of 2026. These requests constitute 21.9% of Credit Income’s $36 billion asset base and 40.7% of OTIC’s approximately $3 billion net asset value.
Both investment vehicles are implementing a 5% quarterly redemption ceiling on total assets — a restriction embedded within the original fund documentation when capital commitments were initially secured. Operating within this framework, Credit Income will distribute roughly $988 million, while OTIC will process $179 million in redemptions.
Inflows continue despite the exodus. Credit Income secured $872 million in new commitments, resulting in a net outflow of $116 million. OTIC attracted $127 million in fresh capital, producing a net withdrawal of approximately $52 million, representing about 2% of its net asset value.
According to Blue Owl, Credit Income maintains $11.3 billion in available cash, credit facilities, and liquid holdings — sufficient to accommodate a minimum of two years of quarterly redemptions at the 5% threshold without liquidating any loan positions.
Catalysts Behind the Capital Flight
The redemption momentum has been accumulating for several months. Escalating anxiety surrounding corporate default risks, excessive lending exposure to software enterprises, and AI’s potential to disrupt traditional software business frameworks have collectively driven investor sentiment shifts.
OTIC’s holdings concentrate heavily on financing arrangements with software companies acquired through leveraged buyout transactions. Blue Owl challenged pessimistic interpretations, emphasizing that its software borrowers operate mission-critical platforms, achieving 10% revenue expansion and 14% cash operating profit growth. The vehicle has generated a 9.6% annualized return since its 2022 inception.
Credit Income’s underlying portfolio companies are similarly performing well, demonstrating 9% revenue advancement and 10% cash operating income appreciation. Non-performing loans remain minimal. The fund has posted a 9.2% return since launch.
“We continue to observe a meaningful disconnect between the public dialogue on private credit and the underlying trends in our portfolio,” wrote Blue Owl’s Craig Packer and Eric Bissonnette.
Industry-Wide Headwinds
Blue Owl faces company in this challenge. Ares Management (ARES) dropped 4.6% Thursday to $100.86. Private credit vehicles industry-wide have experienced more than $11 billion in capital withdrawals spanning the previous two quarters.
Various asset managers are adopting divergent redemption strategies. Blackstone and Cliffwater have processed 7%–8% payouts to demonstrate portfolio confidence. Apollo, Ares, and BlackRock have maintained adherence to the 5% limitation.
Meanwhile, Saba Capital’s founder Boaz Weinstein presented an offer in February to acquire Blue Owl fund positions at 65%–80% of net asset value — a maneuver highlighting the dramatic sentiment reversal.
The broader environment intensifies pressure: the Trump administration and investment institutions have been advocating for private credit inclusion in 401(k) retirement plans. The Treasury Department convened a Wednesday meeting with regulatory bodies to examine sector vulnerabilities.
Blue Owl’s Q1 2026 disclosure, published Thursday, revealed Credit Income garnered $872 million in new capital commitments against $988 million in redemption payments, producing a net quarterly outflow of $116 million.
