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Blackstone’s Flagship Private Credit Fund Posts First Monthly Loss In Over Three Years 

Blackstone’s flagship private credit fund posted its first monthly loss in ​more than three years in February, the fund’s website showed on Friday, amid ‌surging investor worries over the sector’s liquidity strains.
The fund, BCRED, reported a total loss of 0.4% in February, its first since September 2022, when it posted a loss of 1.3%.
The Morningstar ​LSTA index of publicly traded leveraged loans fell 0.8% in February, according to Morningstar’s ​website.
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Private credit funds have become a focal point of concern due ⁠to weakening credit quality as a result of their high exposure to vulnerable sectors ​such as software, as well as lack of transparency.
Blackstone’s $82 billion fund allows investors to take ​out a portion of their holdings every quarter.
This year it was hit by a surge in withdrawals in the first quarter, as investors pulled a bigger-than-usual $3.7 billion.
Shares of the world’s largest alternative ​asset manager have lost more than 28% of their value so far this year.
BCRED ​wrote down the value of a “select” number of loans during the month, the Financial Times reported ‌earlier in ⁠the day, citing a letter to financial advisers.
 The report said customer service software firm Medallia was among the companies.
“BCRED continues to deliver strong performance for its investors, with a 9.5% annualized total return since inception for Class I shares, a 360 bps ​premium to leveraged loans,” ​Blackstone said, adding ⁠the fund has outperformed the leveraged loan market by 100 basis points so far this year.
Investor jitters over the state of ​private credit funds have spilled on to Wall Street, with some ​major U.S. ⁠banks tightening lending to the industry even as funds cap withdrawals.
JPMorgan Chase marked down the value of certain loans to private credit players earlier this month, a move that will reduce ⁠lending ​to the funds.
Wall Street giant Morgan Stanley and rival ​BlackRock were among the firms that limited withdrawals from their funds after a surge in redemption requests.
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