Blue Owl Capital (NYSE:OWL), a private credit and permanent capital provider, closed Tuesday at $10.27, down 3.89%. Shares slid after fresh reports on liquidity strains, withdrawal limits, and sector-wide redemption pressure in private credit, and investors are watching how asset sales and fund “gating” risks shape future capital-raising.
The company’s trading volume reached 54 million shares, which is about 141% above compared with its three-month average of 22.4 million shares. Blue Owl Capital went public in 2020 and has grown 1% since its IPO.
The broader U.S. markets weakened Tuesday, with the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX:^GSPC) falling 0.94% to 6,816.63 and the Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX:^IXIC) losing 1.02% to finish at 22,517. Within alternative asset management, industry peers Blackstone (NYSE:BX) closed at $110.92 (-3.83%) and KKR (NYSE:KKR) finished at $90.55 (-0.07%), reflecting caution around credit and private market exposures.
Blue Owl shares fell to a 52-week low of $10.07 as concerns about private credit redemptions spread across the sector. Reports that Blackstone’s BCRED vehicle recorded $1.7 billion in net outflows and a 7.9% gross redemption rate heightened scrutiny of non-bank lenders, increasing pressure on names seen as sensitive to retail liquidity shifts.
Blue Owl agreed to sell about $1.4 billion in direct lending investments at 99.7% of par, showing that loan values are still close to face value. The company also filed a shelf registration for an employee stock ownership plan covering up to 50 million Class A shares, which investors are watching for possible dilution. Investors will watch to see if asset sales continue to happen near par and if strong fundraising can balance out redemption pressure, especially as retail flows remain unpredictable.
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Eric Trie has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Blackstone and KKR. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.