Alt Investments
We're Not Halting Investor Liquidity In Debt Fund

The episode plays to concerns on what the limits should be about opening the private credit asset class to a wider universe of investors.
Late last week, private credit group Blue Owl pushed back
against reports saying that it is halting liquidity in a retail
debt fund.
The saga concerns the Blue Owl Capital Corp II (OBDC II) fund.
Media reports said investors would no longer be able to redeem
their holdings in quarterly intervals. Instead, the company would
return investors’ capital in episodic payments as it sells down
assets in coming quarters and years.
For some time it has been argued that if retail investors enter
the relatively illiquid asset class of private credit – a sector
that is sometimes called “shadow banking” – they might fall foul
of adverse market conditions. The attempt to "democratise" access
to areas previously dominated by large institutions and
ultra-wealthy clients has
raised concerns in the wealth management industry.
After a query from WealthBriefing on Friday, the New
York-headquartered firm said in a statement: “Contrary to what
has been reported by some, we are not halting investor liquidity
in OBDC II.
“In fact, we are accelerating the return of capital. This asset
sale will return 30 per cent of OBDC II investors’ capital at
book value to shareholders equally on a pro rata basis. Instead
of resuming a 5 per cent a quarter tender, where only tendering
investors get a small portion of their capital back, we are
returning six times as much capital and returning it to all
shareholders over the next 45 days. In the coming quarters we
will continue to pursue this plan to return capital to OBDC II
investors.”
Reports (Financial Times, Bloomberg, Reuters, others)
quoted the firm as saying the fund “intends to prioritise
delivering liquidity ratably to all shareholders through
quarterly return of capital distributions, which are intended to
replace future quarterly tender offers and may be funded by
earnings, repayments, other asset sale opportunities or strategic
transactions.”
On 18 February, Blue Owl announced financial results, including
that it was selling $1.4 billion of credit investments. Blue
Owl reported net investment income per share of $0.38 per share
at the end of December last year, falling from $0.47 a year
before. The company had investments in 234 portfolio companies
with an aggregate size of $16.5 billion at fair value, down from
$17.13 billion on 30 September last year.
“This strategic transaction enhances balance sheet flexibility,
modestly increases portfolio diversity and creates additional
capacity to deploy capital into attractive, risk-adjusted
investment opportunities,” it said.
“What began as a targeted transaction to provide liquidity to
OBDC II shareholders attracted significant interest from
sophisticated institutional investors, allowing us to
opportunistically extend the sale to OBDC. We expect this
transaction to reduce leverage, modestly increase portfolio
diversity and create additional capacity to invest in compelling
new opportunities for the benefit of OBDC shareholders,” Craig
Packer, Blue Owl’s CEO, said.
Reports noted that OBDC II has been closed to redemptions since
November 2025 after it abandoned efforts to merge it with a
larger publicly traded credit fund managed by Blue Owl.
OBDC II is not publicly traded. It offers investors the option to
take out cash every quarter at the fund’s stated value, generally
up to 5 per cent of net assets.
In recent years, there has been a growth of “evergreen” and
semi-liquid funds to give retail, affluent and high net
worth investors access to areas such as private equity. This
publication has reported on whether the sector is sufficiently
prepared for a negative market shock or a recession. (See
articles
here and
here.)