Investors wanted out. The fund said not yet.
Carlyle's flagship private credit fund got hit with redemption requests worth 15.7% of its total shares in Q1. The fund only lets 5% leave per quarter. That means about two out of every three investors who asked for their money back were told to wait.
It's Everywhere
The wave isn't just hitting Carlyle. Blue Owl saw 21.9% of its fund try to exit - the worst in the group. Apollo came in at 11.2%. Ares hit 11.6%. Even Blackstone, the biggest name in the space, saw 8% head for the door.
Carlyle said the timing of its window - which came after rivals had already closed theirs - left it holding the bag for investors who couldn't get out elsewhere.
Why It Matters
Private credit grew into a $1.7 trillion market by selling steady returns with less risk. But these funds don't work like stocks - you can't just sell when you want.
When three times more money tries to leave than the fund allows, it raises a basic question: what if this keeps going?
What to Watch
The sector is loaded up on software and tech loans - the same area getting crushed by AI fears in the public market. If defaults rise and more investors push to leave, managers may have to sell assets cheap. That kind of cycle feeds on itself.
