Investors request $16B in withdrawals from private-credit funds, managers return $6B
Rising withdrawal requests from private-credit funds highlight liquidity challenges, potentially impacting broader financial markets and digital assets. The post Investors request $16B in withdrawals from private-credit funds, managers return $6B appeared first on Crypto Briefing

Investors request $16B in withdrawals from private-credit funds, managers return $6B The growing gap between what investors want out and what they can actually get is raising contagion concerns across financial markets, including crypto. Share Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jul. 3, 2026 Private-credit funds are starting to feel like a Hotel California situation.
Investors wanted $15.6 billion back in the second quarter of 2026. Fund managers handed over $5.
9 billion. That means roughly 62 cents of every dollar requested stayed locked inside these funds, whether investors liked it or not. The withdrawal requests jumped from $13.
9 billion in Q1, a trend that suggests the pressure isn’t easing. It’s accelerating. The redemption wall Blackstone’s BCRED fund, one of the largest non-traded private credit vehicles, saw redemption requests of roughly 10% of its assets, around $4.
4 billion. But the fund’s quarterly cap sits at 5%, meaning it paid out approximately $2.2 billion and effectively told the rest of the line to come back next quarter.
Advertisement Apollo’s ADS fund had it even worse on a percentage basis. Withdrawal requests hit roughly 16.8% of assets, or about $2.
4 billion. With the same 5% quarterly cap in place, the fund is expected to see net outflows of around $400 million, representing about 3% of its net asset value. Ares’ ASIF fund watched its redemption requests climb to 14.
4% from 11.6% the prior quarter. Same cap.
Same result. A growing backlog of investors who want their money and can’t get it. Why the rush for the exits The redemption surge isn’t random panic.
These funds have heavy exposure to the software and SaaS sector, an industry valued at roughly $500 billion as of late 2025. AI technology is reshaping revenue models for the very companies these funds lent to, and valuation uncertainty in illiquid portfolios has investors asking uncomfortable questions about whether the marks on these loans reflect reality. Non-traded funds that offer quarterly redemption windows have become the epicenter of this stress.
These vehicles were designed primarily for affluent individual investors, not institutional players with long time horizons. Fund managers are enforcing strict payout limitations to avoid crystallizing losses through forced asset sales at discounted prices, contributing to a backlog of unmet withdrawal requests and share price declines for asset management companies. The crypto connection When large pools of capital face redemption pressure, investors who can’t get money out of one vehicle may sell liquid assets elsewhere to meet their own obligations — including Bitcoin, Ethereum, or other digital assets that offer instant liquidity, precisely the feature private credit funds lack right now.
As more credit products move on-chain and tokenized credit markets expand, valuation problems in traditional private credit could directly infect their digital counterparts. Analysts have warned of potential spillover effects on digital assets, suggesting macroeconomic contagion effects from the private credit market could impact digital asset valuations and tokenized credit markets. The share prices of major asset management firms have already felt pressure from these redemption dynamics.
In Q2, only 38% of withdrawal requests were honored. A $9.7 billion backlog of unmet requests represents a pressure cooker with a quarterly release valve that isn’t keeping up.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy. MARKETS Investors request $16B in withdrawals from private-credit funds, managers return $6B The growing gap between what investors want out and what they can actually get is raising contagion concerns across financial markets, including crypto.
by Editorial Team Jul. 3, 2026 Share Add us on Google Private-credit funds are starting to feel like a Hotel California situation. Investors wanted $15.
6 billion back in the second quarter of 2026. Fund managers handed over $5.9 billion.
That means roughly 62 cents of every dollar requested stayed locked inside these funds, whether investors liked it or not. The withdrawal requests jumped from $13.9 billion in Q1, a trend that suggests the pressure isn’t easing.
It’s accelerating. The redemption wall Blackstone’s BCRED fund, one of the largest non-traded private credit vehicles, saw redemption requests of roughly 10% of its assets, around $4.4 billion.
But the fund’s quarterly cap sits at 5%, meaning it paid out approximately $2.2 billion and effectively told the rest of the line to come back next quarter. Advertisement Apollo’s ADS fund had it even worse on a percentage basis.
Withdrawal requests hit roughly 16.8% of assets, or about $2.4 billion.
With the same 5% quarterly cap in place, the fund is expected to see net outflows of around $400 million, representing about 3% of its net asset value. Ares’ ASIF fund watched its redemption requests climb to 14
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