Private equity firms are supposed to be the buyers. They raise money. They buy companies, fix them up, and sell them later for a profit. So it stands out when the biggest one starts looking for the exit. Blackstone wants to sell more than $2 billion of stakes it holds in private funds. The Financial Times reported the news on Monday.
What Blackstone Is Selling
Blackstone is building a deal called a collateralised fund obligation. The short name is a CFO. Here is the plain version. It takes a pile of stakes in buyout funds. Then it turns them into bonds. Other investors can buy those bonds. The main buyers are insurers. They like steady, predictable payouts. Bonds backed by fund cash can offer that.
The stakes come from Blackstone Strategic Partners. That unit buys stakes in other private equity funds. It is one of the biggest buyers of these used stakes in the world. Jefferies is advising on the deal. Neither firm has said much in public.
Think of it like a landlord who cannot sell a building. So instead, he sells the rent checks it will pay over the next few years. The building stays put. The cash still moves.
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Why It Is Happening Now
Here is the part that matters for investors. The whole buyout world is stuck. Firms hold about $4 trillion of assets they cannot sell. They need to turn those assets back into cash. Their own investors are waiting on it. Returning that cash is the whole point of a fund.
The hardest ones to move were bought between 2020 and 2022. Back then, borrowing was almost free. Then rates went up. That changed the math, and buyers got picky. That backlog has built up for years.
So these bundled-bond deals are booming. Issuance has hit record highs in recent years. When you cannot sell the asset, you sell a slice of its future cash instead.
Blackstone is huge, with more than a trillion dollars under its wing. Even at that size, slow exits are a headache. It is the same hunt for steady income that pulls everyday investors toward other assets too.
What To Watch
Blackstone has not pulled the trigger yet. It could drop the bond plan. It could try a plain sale of the stakes instead. A plain sale just means handing the stakes to another buyer. The deal could still change shape before it closes. Buyers will study the funds inside it closely. Older stakes can be hard to price.
Either way, the message is the same. Even the largest name in private equity wants its money back out the door. When the biggest player needs an exit, the rest of the market tends to notice.
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