BlackRock said on Friday it has limited withdrawals from a flagship debt fund after a surge in redemption requests, as investor worries mount around the $2 trillion private credit industry. Shares of the worldโ€™s largest asset manager fell 6. 7% on the New York Stock Exchange, amid a broader market selloff after worse-than-expected U.

S. jobs data and escalating U.

S. -Israeli war against Iran.

Sentiment has soured around private credit in recent months, and retail investors are increasingly asking for their money back from funds like BlackRockโ€™s $26 billion HPS Corporate Lending Fund (HLEND), which โ were โ€‹designed to be open to wealthy individuals. โ€œIt should serve as a warning sign for the industry and the rulemakers about the downside of illiquid funds for retail investors,โ€ said Greggory Warren, senior stock analyst at Morningstar. Last yearโ€™s bankruptcies of a U.

S. auto parts supplier and a subprime auto lender, along with the collapse of a UK mortgage lender last week, have raised questions about lending standards. Earlier this week, mounting โ€‹requests โ€‹prompted rival Blackstone to lift the usual 5% redemption limit on a $82 billion โ fund to 7%, while the company and its employees invested $400 million to allow all requests to be met.

Blue Owl bought back 15. 4% of one of its funds in January.

HLEND received โ€Œwithdrawal requests worth $1. 2 billion in the first quarter, or roughly 9.

3% of its net asset value. Story continues below this ad It told investors it would pay out $620 million as part of the quarterly redemption, hitting the 5% threshold that is the standard point at which managers of these funds can restrict further withdrawals. Blue Owl replaced client redemptions at one fund with promised payouts.

โ€œThe biggest risk for the alternative asset managers is that a marked increase in loan defaults on the part of their borrowers has an adverse effect on investment performance, which impacts future fundraising and monetizations,โ€ Warren said. STRUCTURAL MISMATCH HLEND, a business development company (BDC) acquired โ by BlackRock along with its manager, HPS โ Investment Partners, in a $12 billion push into private credit in 2024, said withdrawal requests breached the 5% limit for the first time since the fundโ€™s inception.

Story continues below this ad BDCs raise money, โ predominantly from retail investors, and use it โ€Œto extend loans to mid-sized companies that usually cannot be sold quickly, which spells trouble if โ€‹lots of investors want to sell at once. Blackstone President Jon Gray said last โ€Œweek that institutional investors were continuing to allocate to private credit. HLEND said the 5% curb prevents โ€œa structural mismatch between investor capital and the expected duration of the private credit loans in which HLEND invests.

โ€ โ€œBy preventing redemptions โ€Œthrough gates, fund managers can avoid being โ€‹forced sellers of โ€‹assets, which would โ€‹negatively impact investment returns for the remaining fund investors, given the opacity and illiquidity of the holdings in these funds,โ€ Morningstarโ€™s Warren said. Subscriptions to the fund were $840 million in the first quarter, lower โ€‹than the $1. 2 billion that investors originally sought to withdraw.

Story continues below this ad SOFTWARE EXPOSURE HLEND says its loans are โ primarily to mature private companies with stable cash flows, and structured to be paid back first if the borrower goes bankrupt. It pays dividends monthly.

According to company documents, 19% of HLENDโ€™s portfolio is tied up in software, a sector that has faced โ€Œaggressive selling as investors fear โ disruption from AI-first startups. Investors are also rushing to safe havens as markets reel with heightened volatility this year, amid mounting concerns of an economic slowdown from a prolonged conflict in the Middle East, โ€‹AI-fueled disruptions and loan defaults.

HPS said in a statement that it has an opportunity to lean into the volatility.