BlackRock Blocks $580M in Withdrawal Requests from HPS Corporate Lending Fund

Wait 5 sec.

TLDR:BlackRock blocked $580M in withdrawal requests after its HPS fund hit the 5% quarterly redemption cap limit. The $3 trillion private credit market faces a structural mismatch between investor liquidity needs and long-term loan terms. Blue Owl and BlackRock both faced heavy withdrawal pressure, pointing to possible tightening across private lending markets.Weakening labor markets and slower consumer spending are raising corporate debt repayment risks across private credit portfolios.BlackRock, one of the world’s largest asset managers with $10 trillion under management, has restricted withdrawals from its $26 billion HPS Corporate Lending Fund. Investors submitted $1.2 billion in redemption requests, equal to 9.3% of the fund’s total assets. The fund paid out $620 million before reaching its 5% quarterly redemption cap. The remaining withdrawal requests were then blocked through a mechanism known as a redemption gate.The Structure Behind Private Credit FundsPrivate credit funds lend directly to companies that cannot access traditional bank financing. These loans typically carry interest rates between 8% and 12% per year. The loans last between three and seven years and are not traded on any public market. That makes them less liquid than standard investment products.This creates a structural mismatch between investor withdrawal expectations and long-term loan schedules. Investors in these funds often expect short-term or periodic access to their money. However, the underlying corporate loans are locked into multi-year repayment timelines. That tension becomes clear when many investors attempt to withdraw capital at once.As BullTheory.io pointed out, the fund paid $620 million but blocked the rest once it hit the 5% cap. That cap is a built-in protection called a redemption gate. It limits how much capital can leave the fund within a single quarter. It protects the fund’s overall stability.BREAKING: Blackrock a $10 TRILLION asset manager, might be facing a liquidity crunch in its private credit fund.BlackRock limited withdrawals from its $26 Billion HPS Corporate Lending Fund after investors requested $1.2B, equal to 9.3% of the fund’s assets.The fund paid… pic.twitter.com/y2viA6QkcU— Bull Theory (@BullTheoryio) March 6, 2026The private credit market has grown to roughly $3 trillion in total size. Much of that growth followed the 2008 financial crisis, when companies turned away from traditional bank lending. BlackRock’s HPS Corporate Lending Fund is among the largest vehicles operating in this space today. The market now plays a central role in corporate financing.Credit Conditions Show Signs of TighteningThe broader private credit market is now facing growing pressure from economic shifts. The labor market is weakening, and layoffs are increasing across several sectors. Consumer spending is also slowing. These changes tend to reduce corporate revenue, which makes debt repayment harder for many borrowers.When corporate revenues slow, companies that rely on borrowed capital face a higher risk of missing loan payments. That raises the overall credit risk within private lending portfolios. As that risk rises, more investors are likely to seek early withdrawals from the funds holding those loans.@BullTheoryio raised the question of whether these events signal broader tightening across the private lending market. BlackRock is not the only fund to face this situation. Blue Owl Capital also experienced heavy withdrawal pressure before the BlackRock redemption gate made headlines. Two major funds showing this pattern within a short time is worth watching closely.If more companies struggle to repay loans while investors seek to exit at the same time, stress will not stay limited to individual funds. It tends to spread through connected parts of the lending system. The events at BlackRock and Blue Owl may be the early stage of a broader credit cycle.The post BlackRock Blocks $580M in Withdrawal Requests from HPS Corporate Lending Fund appeared first on Blockonomi.